Publication | Open Access
Tilt Training: A New Treatment for Recurrent Neurocardiogenic Syncope and Severe Orthostatic Intolerance
168
Citations
11
References
1998
Year
Upright PostureBiofeedbackTilt TrainingMedical TreatmentKinesiologySevere Orthostatic IntoleranceHealth SciencesAutonomic SystemDevice TherapyPatient MonitoringContinued Tilt TrainingRehabilitationMedicineNew TreatmentCardiologyPhysical Medicine
Medical treatment of neurocardiogenic syncope is insufficient in many cases. We have observed a therapeutic effect of repeated head-up tilt testing. Therefore, we have started a program of tilt training for heavily symptomatic patients. After hospital admission, they were tilted daily (60 degrees inclination) until syncope, or until a duration of 45-90 minutes (90 sessions in 13 patients). The mean tilt tolerance, at the first diagnostic head-up tilt table test, was 22.3 minutes (st. dev. 10.9). Before hospital discharge, 12/13 patients could sustain the full duration of tilt table testing without any symptom. In one patient syncope persisted. The patients were instructed to continue a program of daily tilt training at home, by standing against a wall for 30 minutes, one or two times per day. This resulted in a complete disappearance of syncope in all 13 patients. Orthostatic intolerance and the excessive autonomic reflex activity of neurocardiogenic syncope can be remedied by a program of continued tilt training, without the administration of drugs.
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