Pathophysiology of syncope: current concepts and their development
File(s)DRAFT Embedded Figures REVISED SUBMISSION.docx (764.38 MB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Benditt, David G
Fedorowski, Artur
Sutton, Richard
van Dijk, J Gert
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Syncope is a symptom in which transient loss of consciousness occurs as a consequence of a self-limited, spontaneously-terminating, period of cerebral hypoperfusion. Many circulatory disturbances (e.g. brady- or tachyarrhythmias, reflex cardioinhibition-vasodepression-hypotension) may trigger a syncope or near-syncope episode, and identifying the cause(s) is often challenging. Some syncope may involve multiple etiologies operating in concert, whereas in other cases multiple syncope events may be due to various differing causes at different times. In this communication we address current understanding of the principal contributors to syncope pathophysiology including examination of the manner in which concepts evolved, and an overview of factors that constitute consciousness and loss of consciousness, and aspects of neural-vascular control and communication that are impacted by cerebral hypo perfusion leading to syncope . Emphasis focuses on: 1) current understanding of the way transient systemic hypotension impacts brain blood flow and brain function, 2) the complexity and temporal sequence of vascular, humoral and cardiac factors that may accompany the most common causes of syncope, 3) the range of circumstances and disease states that may lead to syncope, and 4) clinical features associated with syncope and in particular the reflex syncope syndromes.
Date Issued
2024-01-01
Date Acceptance
2024-08-12
Citation
Physiological Reviews, 2024, 105 (1)
ISSN
0031-9333
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Journal / Book Title
Physiological Reviews
Volume
105
Issue
1
Copyright Statement
Copyright © 2024, Physiological Reviews. This is the author’s accepted manuscript made available under a CC-BY licence in accordance with Imperial’s Research Publications Open Access policy (www.imperial.ac.uk/oa-policy)
License URL
Identifier
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/39146249
Subjects
cerebral blood flow
Syncope, Orthostatic hypotension, Arrhythmias, Neurohumoral agents
Publication Status
Published
Coverage Spatial
United States
Date Publish Online
2024-10-25