Syncope (peds)
Background
Syncope : abrupt loss of consciousness with full recovery after a short duration. Usually because of an abrupt cerebral hypo-perfusion (30-50% from baseline) – due to brief cardiac output decrease, impaired venous return, a cardiac arrhythmia, or transient hypotension. Peak age – 15-19 years of age, equal sex distribution. In the 6 year old – usually due to seizures, breath holding or cardiac issue. In total only 3% of Peds ED visits. Most are benign; 60-80% are vaso-vagal. Cardiac causes constitute 2-6%.
Clinical Features
History is key! Ask as many witnesses as possible. Pre syncope? Any jerking or tonic-clonic movement (before/during/after LOC)? Exertion? SOB? Dehydration? Heat? Last meal? Aura? Amnesia? Nausea? Diaphoresis? Menstruating? Previous cardiac surgery or procedure? Previous diagnosis of Kawasaki? Medications or over-the-counter or illicit drugs?
Red flags:
- Exercise-induced collapse
- Chest pain
- Previous cardiac surgery
- Family history of:
- Sudden Death
- Cardiac disease at early age? or Pacemaker?
- Drowning
- SIDS
Diagnosis
- Orthostatic vital signs
- Full neurological examination (focus on Fundi, Cranial Nerves, Gait, Romberg, DTR’s and Cereberllar testing)
- Any stigmata of Endocrine disorder? Marfanoid habitus? Neurological disorder (e.g. café-au-lait spots)?
- Signs of an eating disorder?
Work-Up
- ECG – looking for:
- WPW – short PR, Delta waves, wide QRS
- Long QT syndrome – QTc >0.450 sec
- Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy – LVH, ST changes, T wave inversions, lateral leads needle like Q waves and absent R waves
- Bruagada syndrome – refer to Brugada (incomplete RBBB with ST elevations in V1-3)
- Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD) – incomplete RBBB with T waves inversion in V1-3. Epsilon wave is pathognemonic (up-notching of a terminal Q wave)
- Tox screen (urine or serum – based on clinical scenario)
- Beta-HCG
- Serum extended electrolytes, CBC, TSH
- Bedside cardiac ultrasound
- Cardiac hypertrophy or pericardial effusion
- Assess the IVC for dehydration
DDx
- Toxicological (stimulants or depressant)
- CO poisoning
- Breath-holding spell
- Tet-spell
Treatment
Directed towards reversing the cause
Disposition
Cardiology consult +/- admission if any ECG abnormality found Admission usually not warranted – consider admitting kids with eating disorder
See Also
Source
Fischer and Cho. Pediatric Syncope: cases from the ED. Emerg Med clin N Am. Vol 28. 2010. Pp 501-516.
