Guest guest Posted March 5, 2001 Report Share Posted March 5, 2001 Docs: My 83-year-old father suffered two spells of syncope this past week, one at my nephew's double-header basketball game and one during a lengthy church service this past weekend. The rooms were crowded and rather warm in both instances. The first episode occurred while sitting, the second while standing. He was transported to Salem Hospital immediately following he first incident and all tests were negative, including EKG, blood work, etc. Although not fully diabetic, he was placed on Amyrl about a year ago to stimulate insulin production. The EMTs said his blood sugar was 195 when they checked it on Sunday, but weren't too concerned since he had eaten about 45 minutes earlier. My father has also had glaucoma for about 30 years and uses pilocarpine HCL and Cosopt (Timoptic) eye drops daily. He also takes 1 tab of Zestril for mildly elevated BP. His twin brother, who also has glaucoma but no glucose or BP problems, began experiencing syncope about a year ago and subsequently was given a pacemaker due to episodic cardiac arrests. However, he still experiences syncope about once a week despite the pacer. By the way, they also had an older brother who required a pacemaker at age 90 and lived 5 more years; and they have a younger brother who fell (syncope?) while taking his daily walk a few years ago, striking his head on the pavement and subsequently requiring a permanent shunt to relieve increased intracranial pressure due to recurring fluid build-up. Anyway, a couple of doctors at church this past weekend suggested that my father wear a Holter monitor for a week to see if any cardiogenic factors show up. No one at the hospital suggested that last week, since all of the real-time cardiac tests were negative. However, my father has an appointment with his GP today to, hopefully, get a monitor. But since both episodes occurred in warm rooms with tons of people (low O2 / high CO2), and he as wearing a tight-collared shirt and tie at the time of the most recent event, I'm wondering if he may simply be suffering from a carotid sinus dysfunction. An article by and Green titled "Evaluating and Managing Syncope" on Medscape leads me to believe that it's more of a carotid sinus hypersensitivity perhaps combined with some orthostatic factors rather than a cardiogenic syncope. They also suggested performing a "carotid sinus massage" test and a tilt-table test. Do any of you know how to perform these? I tried the carotid sinus massage, one side at a time as suggested by the authors, but could not reproduce the syncope. However, I'm not sure I was performing the test correctly and massaging the right areas. Furthermore, I'm not sure what their definition of "massaging" meant (heavy, light, fast, slow), since no description was given and my attempt to find more specific postings on this subject were unsuccessful. If any of you have had experience with these tests and can give me more specific instructions, I would appreciate it. Sincerely, Lyndon McGill, DC Salem, Oregon (503) 362-5555 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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