Tilt table testing, methodology and practical insights for the clinic

Tilt table testing (TTT) has been used for decades to study short-term blood pressure (BP) and heart rate regulation during orthostatic challenges. TTT provokes vasovagal reflex in many syncope patients as a background of widespread use. Despite the availability of evidence-based practice syncope gu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical physiology and functional imaging 2024-03, Vol.44 (2), p.119-130
Hauptverfasser: van Zanten, Steven, Sutton, Richard, Hamrefors, Viktor, Fedorowski, Artur, de Lange, Frederik J
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container_issue 2
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container_title Clinical physiology and functional imaging
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creator van Zanten, Steven
Sutton, Richard
Hamrefors, Viktor
Fedorowski, Artur
de Lange, Frederik J
description Tilt table testing (TTT) has been used for decades to study short-term blood pressure (BP) and heart rate regulation during orthostatic challenges. TTT provokes vasovagal reflex in many syncope patients as a background of widespread use. Despite the availability of evidence-based practice syncope guidelines, proper application and interpretation of TTT in the day-to-day care of syncope patients remain challenging. In this review, we offer practical information on what is needed to perform TTT, how results should be interpreted including the Vasovagal Syncope International Study classification, why syncope induction on TTT is necessary in patients with unexplained syncope and on indications for TTT in syncope patient care. The minimum requirements to perform TTT are a tilt table with an appropriate tilt-down time, a continuous beat-to-beat BP monitor with at least three electrocardiogram leads and trained staff. We emphasize that TTT remains a valuable asset that adds to history building but cannot replace it, and highlight the importance of recognition when TTT is abnormal even without syncope. Acknowledgement by the patient/eyewitness of the reproducibility of the induced attack is mandatory in concluding a diagnosis. TTT may be indicated when the initial syncope evaluation does not yield a certain, highly likely, or possible diagnosis, but raises clinical suspicion of (1) reflex syncope, (2) orthostatic hypotension (OH), (3) postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome or (4) psychogenic pseudosyncope. A therapeutic indication for TTT in the patient with a certain, highly likely or possible diagnosis of reflex syncope, may be to educate patients on prodromes. In patients with reflex syncope with OH TTT can be therapeutic to recognize hypotensive symptoms causing near-syncope to perform physical countermanoeuvres for syncope prevention (biofeedback). Detection of hypotensive susceptibility requiring therapy is of special value.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/cpf.12859
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source Wiley Blackwell Single Titles; SWEPUB Freely available online
subjects Allmänmedicin
Biofeedback
Blood pressure
Clinical Medicine
Diagnosis
EKG
Electrocardiography
Fainting
Family Medicine
Feedback
Heart rate
Hypotension
Klinisk medicin
Medical and Health Sciences
Medicin och hälsovetenskap
Patients
Syncope
Tachycardia
Vasovagal syncope
title Tilt table testing, methodology and practical insights for the clinic
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