Syncope (peds): Difference between revisions

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''For adult patients see [[syncope]]''
''For adult patients see [[syncope]]''
==Background==
==Background==
*Usually because of an abrupt cerebral hypoperfusion (30-50% from baseline) <ref>Hurst D, et al. Syncope in the pediatric emergency department. Pediatr Emerg Care. 2015;31(5):331-334. PMID 25875993</ref>
*Usually because of an abrupt cerebral hypoperfusion (30-50% from baseline)  
*Peak age: 15-19 years of age
*Peak age: 15-19 years of age
*In younger children, usually due to [[seizure (peds)|seizures]], [[breath-holding spell]] or cardiac disease
*In younger children, usually due to [[seizure (peds)|seizures]], [[breath-holding spell]] or cardiac disease

Latest revision as of 10:26, 22 March 2026

For adult patients see syncope

Background

  • Usually because of an abrupt cerebral hypoperfusion (30-50% from baseline)
  • Peak age: 15-19 years of age
  • In younger children, usually due to seizures, breath-holding spell or cardiac disease

Red flags

  • Exercise-induced collapse
  • Chest pain
  • Previous cardiac surgery
  • Family history of:
    • Sudden Death
    • Cardiac disease at early age
    • Unexplained deaths
    • Death due to single-vehicle accident
    • Drowning
    • SIDS

Clinical Features

  • Abrupt loss of consciousness with full recovery after a short duration

Differential Diagnosis

Syncope (peds)

Evaluation

Workup

  • ECG
  • Urine pregnancy (if age/sex appropriate)


Consider based on history/symptoms

Diagnosis

Management

  • Directed towards reversing the cause

Disposition

  • Admission if any ECG abnormality found
  • Admission usually not warranted – consider admitting kids with eating disorder
  • Consider discharge home with cardiology consult and strict activity restrictions if suspicion of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in otherwise well patient with reliable caretakers

See Also

References

  • Fischer and Cho. Pediatric Syncope: cases from the ED. Emerg Med clin N Am. Vol 28. 2010. Pp 501-516.