Psychiatric conditions in patients with recurrent unexplained syncope.

Standard

Psychiatric conditions in patients with recurrent unexplained syncope. / Ventura, Rodolfo; Maas, Renke; Rüppel, R; Stuhr, U; Schuchert, A; Meinertz, T; Nienaber, C A.

in: EUROPACE, Jahrgang 3, Nr. 4, 4, 2001, S. 311-316.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Ventura, R, Maas, R, Rüppel, R, Stuhr, U, Schuchert, A, Meinertz, T & Nienaber, CA 2001, 'Psychiatric conditions in patients with recurrent unexplained syncope.', EUROPACE, Jg. 3, Nr. 4, 4, S. 311-316. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11678390?dopt=Citation>

APA

Ventura, R., Maas, R., Rüppel, R., Stuhr, U., Schuchert, A., Meinertz, T., & Nienaber, C. A. (2001). Psychiatric conditions in patients with recurrent unexplained syncope. EUROPACE, 3(4), 311-316. [4]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11678390?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Ventura R, Maas R, Rüppel R, Stuhr U, Schuchert A, Meinertz T et al. Psychiatric conditions in patients with recurrent unexplained syncope. EUROPACE. 2001;3(4):311-316. 4.

Bibtex

@article{040d140da3314a9193712bc2a8c6dd6e,
title = "Psychiatric conditions in patients with recurrent unexplained syncope.",
abstract = "AIMS: The relationship between syncope and psychiatric disorders is little investigated. This study evaluated the prevalence of psychiatric diseases and prognostic outcome in patients with recurrent unexplained syncope. METHODS AND RESULTS: After an inconclusive standard diagnostic work-up for syncope, including head-up tilt testing, a psychiatric evaluation was offered to 50 consecutive patients with recurrent syncope. The evaluation was accepted by 26 patients (77% females, 36 +/- 16 years) and refused by 24 (63% females, 50 +/- 19 years). A psychiatric disorder was diagnosed in 21 (81%) patients: 12 had depression, four panic attacks, two general anxiety, and three a somatization disorder. Only five patients showed normal psychosocial function. Of the patients with psychiatric disorders four accepted psychiatric care, such as psychotherapy and/or pharmacotherapy; 17 patients refused treatment. During 6 months of follow-up no patient under psychiatric care had syncope, while all patients without psycho- or pharmacotherapy had recurrent syncopal events. In these patients the median of syncopal episodes was three in a 6 months interval before and after clinical assessment. Patients who refused both psychiatric evaluation and therapy continued to experience syncope as before. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with recurrent unexplained syncope psychiatric alteration is common. However, patients seldom accepted a psychiatric evaluation and treatment.",
author = "Rodolfo Ventura and Renke Maas and R R{\"u}ppel and U Stuhr and A Schuchert and T Meinertz and Nienaber, {C A}",
year = "2001",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "3",
pages = "311--316",
journal = "EUROPACE",
issn = "1099-5129",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Psychiatric conditions in patients with recurrent unexplained syncope.

AU - Ventura, Rodolfo

AU - Maas, Renke

AU - Rüppel, R

AU - Stuhr, U

AU - Schuchert, A

AU - Meinertz, T

AU - Nienaber, C A

PY - 2001

Y1 - 2001

N2 - AIMS: The relationship between syncope and psychiatric disorders is little investigated. This study evaluated the prevalence of psychiatric diseases and prognostic outcome in patients with recurrent unexplained syncope. METHODS AND RESULTS: After an inconclusive standard diagnostic work-up for syncope, including head-up tilt testing, a psychiatric evaluation was offered to 50 consecutive patients with recurrent syncope. The evaluation was accepted by 26 patients (77% females, 36 +/- 16 years) and refused by 24 (63% females, 50 +/- 19 years). A psychiatric disorder was diagnosed in 21 (81%) patients: 12 had depression, four panic attacks, two general anxiety, and three a somatization disorder. Only five patients showed normal psychosocial function. Of the patients with psychiatric disorders four accepted psychiatric care, such as psychotherapy and/or pharmacotherapy; 17 patients refused treatment. During 6 months of follow-up no patient under psychiatric care had syncope, while all patients without psycho- or pharmacotherapy had recurrent syncopal events. In these patients the median of syncopal episodes was three in a 6 months interval before and after clinical assessment. Patients who refused both psychiatric evaluation and therapy continued to experience syncope as before. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with recurrent unexplained syncope psychiatric alteration is common. However, patients seldom accepted a psychiatric evaluation and treatment.

AB - AIMS: The relationship between syncope and psychiatric disorders is little investigated. This study evaluated the prevalence of psychiatric diseases and prognostic outcome in patients with recurrent unexplained syncope. METHODS AND RESULTS: After an inconclusive standard diagnostic work-up for syncope, including head-up tilt testing, a psychiatric evaluation was offered to 50 consecutive patients with recurrent syncope. The evaluation was accepted by 26 patients (77% females, 36 +/- 16 years) and refused by 24 (63% females, 50 +/- 19 years). A psychiatric disorder was diagnosed in 21 (81%) patients: 12 had depression, four panic attacks, two general anxiety, and three a somatization disorder. Only five patients showed normal psychosocial function. Of the patients with psychiatric disorders four accepted psychiatric care, such as psychotherapy and/or pharmacotherapy; 17 patients refused treatment. During 6 months of follow-up no patient under psychiatric care had syncope, while all patients without psycho- or pharmacotherapy had recurrent syncopal events. In these patients the median of syncopal episodes was three in a 6 months interval before and after clinical assessment. Patients who refused both psychiatric evaluation and therapy continued to experience syncope as before. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with recurrent unexplained syncope psychiatric alteration is common. However, patients seldom accepted a psychiatric evaluation and treatment.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 3

SP - 311

EP - 316

JO - EUROPACE

JF - EUROPACE

SN - 1099-5129

IS - 4

M1 - 4

ER -