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Europace 2007 9(2):83-87; doi:10.1093/europace/eul179
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© The European Society of Cardiology 2007. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org


SYNCOPE

Is vasovagal syncope a disease?

Paolo Alboni1,*, Michele Brignole2 and Ettore C. degli Uberti3

1 Division of Cardiology and Arrhythmologic Center, Ospedale Civile, Via Vicini 2, 44042 Cento (FE), Italy; 2 Department of Cardiology and Arrhythmologic Center, Ospedali del Tigullio, Lavagna, Italy; 3 Section of Endocrinology, Department of Biomedical Sciences and Advanced Therapies, University of Ferrara, Italy

Vavovagal syncope (VVS) is not generally associated with cardiovascular, neurological or other diseases, and, therefore, represents an isolated manifestation. Isolated VVS cannot be regarded as a disease for several reasons: spontaneous syncope occurs in about half of individuals during their lives, and the unidentified neural pathways involved in the vasovagal response are probably present in all healthy humans, with individual differences in susceptibility; VVS is induced during tilt testing in several subjects with no history of syncope; during haemorrhagic shock, the vasovagal reaction can be observed in subjects with no history of syncope; about 20% of astronauts, who are selected on the basis of their great resistance to orthostatic stress, experience syncope or presyncope on landing after a short-duration space flight; to date, no genetic basis of VVS has been demonstrated; subjects with VVS are generally normotensive and, importantly, have normal blood pressure regulation apart from the episodes of syncope; hormonal disorders or a generalized state of autonomic involvement, although frequently investigated, have never been clearly demonstrated. Isolated VVS should be distinguished from those forms that start in old age and which are often associated with cardiovascular or neurological disorders, and other dysautonomic disturbances such as carotid sinus hypersensitivity, post-prandial hypotension, and symptoms of autonomic dysfunction. In these subjects, VVS appears as an expression of a pathological process, i.e. a disease, mainly related to a generalized involvement of the autonomic nervous system, which is not yet well-defined from a nosological point of view.

Key Words: Vasovagal syncope, Syncope, Tilt test


* Corresponding author. Tel: +051 6838111; fax: +051 6838471. E-mail address: p.alboni{at}ausl.fe.it


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