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. 2005 May;58(5):499-503.

[Early heart rate increase does not predict the result of the head-up tilt test potentiated with nitroglycerin]

[Article in Spanish]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 15899195
Free article

[Early heart rate increase does not predict the result of the head-up tilt test potentiated with nitroglycerin]

[Article in Spanish]
Arcadi García Alberola et al. Rev Esp Cardiol. 2005 May.
Free article

Abstract

Introduction and objectives: The magnitude of the change in heart rate during the first few minutes of the head-up tilt test has been used to predict the test's result. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the heart rate increase during the head-up tilt test potentiated with nitroglycerin is related to the development of syncope.

Patients and method: The study included 158 consecutive patients with syncope, with stable sinus rhythm, and without structural cardiac disease who were undergoing a head-up tilt test with nitroglycerin. The heart rate increment induced by the tilt maneuver and by nitroglycerin administration was calculated, and its relationship to clinical variables and to the test's results was analyzed.

Results: The head-up tilt test gave positive results in 117 patients (74%). The heart rate was 68.7 (11.3) bpm in the decubitus position and 85.1 (15.4) bpm during the first 6 min of tilting. There was strong inverse correlation between the heart rate increase induced by tilting and age (r=--0.63; P<.001), but the increase (16.8 [9.3] bpm in patients with syncope versus 14.9 [11.3] bpm in those without; P=.3) did not predict the result of the test. The heart rate increase induced by nitroglycerin was also similar for patients with and without syncope during the pharmacologic phase of the test (27.3 [12.6] bpm and 26.7 (13.4) bpm, respectively; P=.8).

Conclusions: The magnitude of the heart rate increase during the first few minutes of tilt-testing and after nitroglycerin administration is inversely related to age but does not predict the result of the head-up tilt test with nitroglycerin.

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