Blackouts Flashcards Preview

Neurology > Blackouts > Flashcards

Flashcards in Blackouts Deck (14)
Loading flashcards...
1
Q

What are causes of blackout/LOC?

A
Vasovagal syncope
Situational syncope - cough, effort, micturition
Carotid sinus syncope
Epilepsy
Stokes-Adams attacks
Hypoglycaemia
Orthostatic hypotension
Anxiety
Drop attacks
Pseudoseizures/Factitious
2
Q

What is vasovagal syncope?

A

Reflex bradycardia and peripheral vasodilation provoked by emotion, pain or standing too long - cannot occur lying
Onset is over seconds
Preceded by pre-syncopal symptoms (nausea, pallor, sweating, narrowing of visual fields)
Brief clinic jerking of the limbs may occur due to cerebral hypo perfusion - no tonic-clonic sequence
Urinary incontinence is uncommon and no tongue biting
LOC lasts for 2 mins and recovery is rapid.

3
Q

What is situation syncope?

A

Clear precipitant of syncope:
Cough - paroxysm of coughing
Effort- exercise - underlying cardiac cause e.g. aortic stenosis, HCM
Micturition - happens during or after urination

4
Q

What is carotid sinus syncope?

A

Hypersensitive baroreceptors cause excessive reflex bradycardia and vasodilation on minimal stimulation - head turning, shaving

5
Q

What features suggest epilepsy

A
Attacks occur when lying down or asleep
Aura
Identifiable triggers
Altered breathing
Cyanosis
Typical tonic-clonic movmeents
Incontinence of urine
Tongue biting
Prolonged post-ictal drowsiness, confusion, amnesia and transient focal paralysis (Todd's palsy)
6
Q

What is Stokes-Adams attack?

A

Transient arrhythmia (bradycardia due to complete heart block) cause reduced cardiac output and LOC.
Patient falls to ground often with no warning except palpitations.
Pale with slow or absent pulse
Recovery is in seconds, patient flushes, pulse speeds up and consciousness regained.
Anoxic clonic jerks may occur
Attacks may happen several times a day in any posture.

7
Q

What doe you see before hypoglycaemia LOC?

A

Tremor, hunger, light-headedness

8
Q

What is orthostatic hypotension

A

Unsteadiness or LOC on standing from lying in those with inadequate vasomotor reflexes: alertly, autonomic neuropathy, antihypertensive medication, overdiuresis, multi-system atrophy

9
Q

What may suggest anxiety?

A

Hyperventilation, tremor, sweating, tachycardia, paraesthesiae, light-headedness

10
Q

What are drop attacks?

A

Sudden fall to the ground without LOC

Mostly benign and due to leg weakness but may also be caused by hydrocephalus or narcolepsy

11
Q

What important tests?

A
CVS - ECG urgently if associated with palpitations - long QT, 3rd degree AV block
Lying standing BP
Neuro
Sleep EEG, EEG
Echo
CT/MRI
12
Q

What are important factors in blackout history?

A
Loss of awaresness
Do they injure themselves
Does patient move?Stiff or floppy?
Incontinency?
Complexion change? (pale/cyanosis could be epilepsy, very pale could be syncope or arrhythmia)
Bite tongue?
Associated symptoms (palpitations, sweat, pallor, chest pain, dyspnoea)
Duration of attack?

Before:
Warning? Aura?
Circumstances - triggers?
Can patient prevent?

During: see above

After:
How much does pt remember?
Muscle ache? (suggests tonic clonic)
Confused or sleepy? (epilepsy post-ictal)

BAckground
When did they start?
Frequency
Anyone else in FHx
Sudden death in FHx
13
Q

What should you ask about prior to attack? After?

A

Before:
Warning? Aura?
Circumstances - triggers?
Can patient prevent?

After:
How much does pt remember?
Muscle ache? (suggests tonic clonic)
Confused or sleepy? (epilepsy post-ictal)

14
Q

What should you ask about background?

A
BAckground
When did they start?
Frequency
Anyone else in FHx
Sudden death in FHx