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Comparative Study
. 2005 Aug;2(8):807-13.
doi: 10.1016/j.hrthm.2005.04.022.

Effect of cough on heart rate and blood pressure in patients with "cough syncope"

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Effect of cough on heart rate and blood pressure in patients with "cough syncope"

David G Benditt et al. Heart Rhythm. 2005 Aug.

Abstract

Background: "Cough syncope" is uncommon, and its mechanism remains controversial.

Objectives: This study evaluated susceptibility to cough-triggered neural reflex hypotension-bradycardia among cough syncope patients. We hypothesized that individuals with cough syncope would manifest not only more profound cough-triggered hypotension than do other fainters but also an inappropriate chronotropic response accompanying cough-induced hypotension, thereby supporting the notion that a neural reflex hypotension-bradycardia contributes to the condition.

Methods/results: Three patient groups were studied. Group 1 patients (n = 9) had "cough syncope." The remaining patients had recurrent faints of other causes: group 2 (n = 13) had a positive head-up tilt test, and group 3 (n = 18) had a negative tilt test. With cough, group 1 patients exhibited a greater drop in systolic pressure (-51 +/- 19.3 mmHg) than did either group 2 (-23 +/- 11.1 mmHg, P < .04) or group 3 patients (-28 +/- 12.4 mmHg, P < .05). Recovery time to normalization of systolic pressure was greater in group 1 (25 +/- 9.1 seconds) than in group 2 or 3 (8 +/- 2.7 seconds and 9 +/- 6.1 seconds, respectively, both P < .01 vs group 1). The expected positive chronotropic response accompanying cough-induced hypotension was diminished in group 1 patients (0.16 +/- 0.21 bpm/mmHg) compared with that in either group 2 (0.74 +/- 0.60 bpm/mmHg, P < .05 vs group 1) or group 3 (0.33 +/- 0.15 bpm/mmHg, P = .06 vs group 1).

Conclusion: Cough syncope patients not only exhibit more pronounced hypotension in response to cough than other fainters, but they also manifest an inappropriate cough-triggered blood pressure-heart rate relationship. These findings argue in favor of the importance of a neurally mediated reflex contribution to symptomatic hypotension in cough syncope.

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