Psychogenic Pseudosyncope: Real or Imaginary? Results from a Case-Control Study in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) Patients

Abstract:

Background and objectives: Orthostatic intolerance (OI) is a clinical condition in which symptoms worsen upon assuming and maintaining upright posture and are ameliorated by recumbency. OI has a high prevalence in patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). Exact numbers on syncopal spells especially if they are on a weekly or even daily basis are not described. Although not a frequent phenomenon, this symptomatology is of very high burden to the patient if present. To explore whether patients with very frequent (pre)syncope spells diagnosed elsewhere with conversion or psychogenic pseudosyncope (PPS) might have another explanation of their fainting spells than behavioral psychiatric disorders, we performed a case-control study comparing ME/CFS patients with and without PPS spells.

Methods and results: We performed a case-control study in 30 ME/CFS patients diagnosed elsewhere with PPS and compared them with 30 control ME/CFS patients without syncopal spells. Cases were gender, age and ME/CFS disease duration matched. Each underwent a tilt test with extracranial Doppler measurements for cerebral blood flow (CBF). ME/CFS cases with PPS had a significant larger CBF reduction at end tilt than controls: 39 (6)% vs. 25 (4)%; (p < 0.0001). Cases had more severe disease compared with controls (chi-square p < 0.01 and had a p = 0.01) for more postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome in cases compared with controls. PETCO2 end-tilt differed also, but the magnitude of difference was smaller than compared with the CBF reduction: there were no differences in heart rate and blood pressure at either end-tilt testing period. Compared with the test with the stockings off, the mean percentage reduction in cardiac output during the test with compression stockings on was lower, 25 (5) mmHg versus 29 (4) mmHg (p < 0.005).

Conclusions: This study demonstrates that in ME/CFS patients suspected of having PPS, or conversion, CBF measurements end-tilt show a large decline compared with a control group of ME/CFS patients. Therefore, hypoperfusion offers an explanation of the orthostatic intolerance and syncopal spells in these patients, where it is clear that origin might not be behavioral or psychogenic, but have a clear somatic pathophysiologic background.

Source: van Campen CLMC, Visser FC. Psychogenic Pseudosyncope: Real or Imaginary? Results from a Case-Control Study in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) Patients. Medicina (Kaunas). 2022 Jan 9;58(1):98. doi: 10.3390/medicina58010098. PMID: 35056406. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35056406/

Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome in patients of orthostatic intolerance symptoms: an ambispective study

Abstract:

Background: A Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) is infrequently diagnosed in routine practice because of the variable range of symptoms that could be seen in cardiac rhythm disorders, vertigo, chronic fatigue syndrome and anxiety panic disorder. POTS is a chronic debilitating condition that affects day to day efficient working of an individual. We have planned a study to look for POTS in patients who are having orthostatic intolerance symptoms and underwent a head-up tilt table test (HUTT).

Aim: To study the prevalence of POTS in patients of orthostatic intolerance (OI) symptoms and to analyze symptomatology, its association with neurocardiogenic syncope (NCS), and its outcome.

Methods: We reviewed the medical records of 246 patients presented with symptoms of OI seen at our centre from January 2010 till March 2019. Out of them, 40 patients included, those qualifying the criteria for POTS on HUTT.

Results: The mean age of the cohort was 25.90 ± 10.33 years with a range of 15 to 55 years, and males comprised 52.5% (21/40) of total patients. The most frequent presenting orthostatic symptoms of POTS patients are loss of consciousness (77.5%), lightheadedness (75%), and palpitation (67.5%). A total of 18 patients (45%) had coexisting neurocardiogenic syncope.

Conclusion: POTS is a prevalent condition and have a significant impact on the quality of life, and the majority of patients may not present with OI symptoms during HUTT. We have to keep this possibility in young patients of transient loss of consciousness because it may coexist with NCS.

Source: Chouksey D, Rathi P, Sodani A, Jain R, Ishar HS. Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome in patients of orthostatic intolerance symptoms: an ambispective study. AIMS Neurosci. 2020 Dec 8;8(1):74-85. doi: 10.3934/Neuroscience.2021004. PMID: 33490373; PMCID: PMC7815479. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7815479/ (Full text)

Syncope: etiology, management, and when to refer

Abstract:

An abnormality of blood pressure control is by far the most likely cause of syncope in children; however, syncope in children may be due to primary cardiac dysrhythmias, particularly in the presence of structural heart disease. An appropriate work-up should include an ECG with a 60-second rhythm strip at first presentation. Tilt testing can usually wait until after a second occurrence on non-pharmacologic therapy. Patients who require more than a history and ECG by the algorithm in the Figure should probably be referred to a cardiologist familiar with the evaluation of syncope. The common form of neurally mediated syncope is also probably related to both breath-holding spells in toddlers, and to many of the cases of chronic fatigue syndrome.

 

Source: Saul JP. Syncope: etiology, management, and when to refer. J S C Med Assoc. 1999 Oct;95(10):385-7. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10550969

 

Hypotension: a forgotten illness?

Abstract:

Low blood pressure is a frequently encountered phenomenon in clinical practice. Few practitioners in the Western world however regard chronic low blood pressure as a genuinely pathological disease state. Evidence is emerging that chronic hypotension is associated with considerable morbidity in the community. It has recently been implicated as the causative mechanism in patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome.

Identification of low blood pressure can prove problematic, so ambulatory blood pressure monitoring may prove a more reliable method both for determining mean blood pressure levels and for identifying episodes of marked hypotension. Low blood pressure is broadly divided into two categories, chronic constitutional hypotension and hypotension associated with abnormal postural control. The causes are examined and the clinical presentations are discussed. An approach to investigation and diagnosis is outlined, and current options regarding treatment and management are described. The clinical spectrum of low blood pressure is wide. From young patients with vagally mediated syncope or patients with iatrogenic hypotension to elderly patients with autonomic degenerative conditions, there exists a substantial body of patients with potentially avoidable or treatable morbidity. Such a group requires more rigorous scientific investigation and a more sympathetic clinical approach.

 

Source: Owens PE, O’Brien ET. Hypotension: a forgotten illness? Blood Press Monit. 1997 Dec;2(1):3-14. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10234084

 

Orthostatic intolerance in the chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

This study aims to investigate the prevalence and pathophysiology of orthostatic intolerance (OI) and its potential contribution to symptoms of a group of unselected patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).

Seventy five patients (65 women, 10 men) with CFS were evaluated. During an initial visit, a clinical suspicion as to the likelihood of observing laboratory evidence of OI was assigned. Laboratory investigation consisted of beat-to-beat recordings of heart rate, blood pressure (Finapres), and stroke volume (impedance cardiograph) while supine and during 80 degrees head-up tilt (HUT), during rhythmic deep breathing (6 breaths/min) and during the Valsalva maneuver. The responses of 48 age-matched healthy controls who had no history of OI were used to define the range of normal responses to these three maneuvers.

Forty percent of patients with CFS had OI during head-up tilt. Sixteen exhibited neurally-mediated syncope alone, seven tachycardia (> 35 bpm averaged over the whole of the head-up tilt) and six a mixture of tachycardia and syncope. Eight of 48 controls exhibited neurally-mediated syncope. The responses to the Valsalva maneuver and to deep breathing were similar in controls and patients. On average, the duration of disease and patient age were significantly less and the onset of symptoms was more often subacute in patients with OI than in those without OI.

We conclude that there exists a clinically identifiable subgroup of patients with CFS and OI that differs from control subjects and from those with CFS without OI for whom treatment specifically aimed at improving orthostatic tolerance may be indicated.

 

Source: Schondorf R, Benoit J, Wein T, Phaneuf D. Orthostatic intolerance in the chronic fatigue syndrome. J Auton Nerv Syst. 1999 Feb 15;75(2-3):192-201. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10189122

 

Neurally mediated hypotension and autonomic dysfunction measured by heart rate variability during head-up tilt testing in children with chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Recent investigations suggest a role for neurally mediated hypotension (NMH) in the symptomatology of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) in adults. Our previous observations in children with NMH and syncope (S) unrelated to CFS indicate that the modulation of sympathetic and parasympathetic tone measured by indices of heart rate variability (HRV) is abnormal in children who faint during head-up tilt (HUT). In order to determine the effects of autonomic tone on HUT in children with CFS we performed measurements of HRV during HUT in 16 patients aged 11-19 with CFS.

Data were compared to 26 patients evaluated for syncope and with 13 normal control subjects. After 30 minutes supine, patients were tilted to 80 degrees for 40 minutes or until syncope occurred. Time domain indices included RR interval, SDNN, RMSSD, and pNN50. An autoregressive model was used to calculate power spectra. LFP (.04-.15 Hz), HFP (.15-.40Hz), and TP (.01-.40Hz). Data were obtained supine (baseline) and after HUT.

Thirteen CFS patients fainted (CFS+, 5/13 pure vasodepressor syncope) and three patients did not (CFS-). Sixteen syncope patients fainted (S+, all mixed vasodepressor-cardioinhibitory) and 10 did not (S-). Four control patients fainted (Control+, all mixed vasodepressor-cardioinhibitory) and nine did not (Control-). Baseline indices of HRV were not different between Control+ and S+, and between Control- and S-, but were depressed in S+ compared to S-. HRV indices were strikingly decreased in CFS patients compared to all other groups.

With tilt, SDNN, RMSSD, and pNN50 and spectral indices decreased in all groups, remaining much depressed in CFS compared to S or control subjects. With HUT, sympathovagal indices (LFP/HFP, nLFP, and nHFP) were relatively unchanged in CFS, which contrasts with the increase in nLFP with HUT in all other groups. With syncope RMSSD, SDNN, LFP, TP, and HFP increased in S+ (and Control+), suggesting enhanced vagal heart rate regulation. These increases were not observed in CFS+ patients.

CFS is associated with NMH during HUT in children. All indices of HRV are markedly depressed in CFS patients, even when compared with already low HRV in S+ or Control+ patients. Sympathovagal balance does not shift toward enhanced sympathetic modulation of heart rate with HUT and there is blunting in the overall HRV response with syncope during HUT. Taken together these data may indicate autonomic impairment in patients with CFS.

 

Source: Stewart J, Weldon A, Arlievsky N, Li K, Munoz J. Neurally mediated hypotension and autonomic dysfunction measured by heart rate variability during head-up tilt testing in children with chronic fatigue syndrome. Clin Auton Res. 1998 Aug;8(4):221-30. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9791743

 

No strong evidence of disturbed regulation of blood pressure in chronic fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Recent medical publications postulate a connection between the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) and disturbed regulation of the circulation, manifesting itself during orthostatic stress testing.

Four studies were published on the circulatory response on prolonged head up tilt testing. Numerous CFS patients displayed postural tachycardia or syncope during the test. However, many CFS patients examined had had orthostatic symptoms prior to the examination.

It is not certain that cardiovascular dysregulation is present in CFS patients without orthostatic symptoms. It is also not clear whether such a dysregulation would be the effect of physical inactivity or a manifestation of a subtle form of autonomic neuropathy.

 

Source: Smit AA, Bolweg NM, Lenders JW, Wieling W. No strong evidence of disturbed regulation of blood pressure in chronic fatigue syndrome. Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 1998 Mar 21;142(12):625-8.[Article in Dutch] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9623125

 

The role of delayed orthostatic hypotension in the pathogenesis of chronic fatigue

Abstract:

Past studies have shown that severe fatigue was the presenting symptom in six of seven patients with delayed orthostatic hypotension and that tilt table-induced hypotension was found in 22 of 23 patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome. We have determined the prevalence of fatigue, volunteered in response to a nonspecific pre-examination questionnaire used in 431 patients, each subsequently diagnosed as having one of eight neurological or endocrine disorders.

The results show that fatigue is a very common symptom in patients with delayed orthostatic hypotension (n = 21), as well as both primary (n = 30) and secondary (n = 106) hypocortisolism: 70-83% in all groups. In contrast, fatigue was an uncommon complaint in patients with multiple system atrophy (MSA) (n = 30), pituitary disorders without hypocortisolism (n = 106) or idiopathic hirsutism (n = 96): 7-33% in all groups, and was intermediate in prevalence in patients with acute hyperadrenergic orthostatic hypotension (n = 32): 41%.

It is concluded that fatigue commonly results from delayed orthostatic hypotension and all forms of hypocortisolism but is less common in patients with acute orthostatic hypotension, both idiopathic and due to MSA, which more commonly present with lightheadedness or syncope.

 

Source: Streeten DH, Anderson GH Jr. The role of delayed orthostatic hypotension in the pathogenesis of chronic fatigue. Clin Auton Res. 1998 Apr;8(2):119-24. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9613802