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Multifactorial intervention after a fall in older people with cognitive impairment and dementia presenting to the accident...

Publisher: 
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
Author: 
Fiona E Shaw, John Bond, David A Richardson, Pamela Dawson, Nicholas Steen, Ian G McKeith and Rose Anne Kenny
Date published: 
30 April, 2003
Region: 
United Kingdom

Publication type: 
research

Fiona E Shaw, Alzheimer's Society research fellow,a John Bond, professor,b David A Richardson, clinical research associate,a Pamela Dawson, senior lecturer,c I Nicholas Steen, statistician,b Ian G McKeith, professor,d and Rose Anne Kenny, professor of cardiovascular research

Sixty-five consecutive elderly patients (mean age 78 years) referred to a ‘syncope’ clinic over a six-month period were prospectively studied. Initial evaluation included ambulatory electrocardiography, carotid sinus massage before and after atropine and prolonged head-up tilt. Diagnostic criteria for causes of syncope were assigned at the beginning of the study.

Overall, a diagnosis was attributed to symptoms in 92% of patients; overlap was present in a quarter. Diagnoses were cardioinhibitory carotid sinus syndrome (CSS; 5%), vasodepressor CSS (26%), mixed CSS (14%), orthostatic hypotension (32%), vasodepressor vasovagal syncope (11%), cardiac arrhythmia (21 %), epilepsy (9%), cerebrovascular disease (6%) and others (12.5%). Sixty per cent of patients with vasodepressor CSS also had orthostatic hypotension or vasodepressor vasovagal syncope suggesting a common aetiology. Using an integrated approach incorporating head-up tilt and carotid sinus massage in selected group of elderly patients referred to a ‘syncope’ clinic, the diagnostic yield was high.

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