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Diagnostic yield of external electrocardiographic loop recorders in patients with recurrent syncope and negative tilt table test.

External electrocardiographic loop recording permits extended cardiac rhythm monitoring and ECG storage before and after device activation. The purpose of the study was to assess the diagnostic yield of external loop recorders in patients with more than two syncopal events within the last 6 months and a negative tilt table test. Twenty-four consecutive patients (51 +/- 14 years, male n = 9) were enrolled with 3 +/- 4 recurrent syncopal events within the last 6 months and no overt structural heart disease. The loop recorder CardioCall continuously records a two-channel ECG via skin electrodes. When activated, up to 4.5 minutes of the ECG preceding activation is stored. The time between tilt table testing and monitoring was 5 +/- 4 weeks. The average monitoring period covered 50 +/- 22 days. Recording was either unsuccessful or terminated prematurely in 5 patients. The reasons were skin irritation secondary to the electrodes in two patients, cable damage in one patient, and two patients inadvertently erased the stored data when replacing the batteries. Fourteen patients activated the loop recorder at least once. Symptoms leading to device activation were syncope (n = 1), dizziness (n = 11), feeling unwell (n = 7), palpitations (n = 5), headaches (n = 1), and chest pain (n = 1). The loop recorder documented sinus tachycardia during the syncopal event. Sinus tachycardia was also observed in 7 other patients, and atrial flutter in two patients. Eight patients had recurrent syncope with two patients experiencing syncope prior to the monitoring period, one syncope occurred in a patient who inadvertently erased the stored data, one event coincided with sinus tachycardia, and 4 (17%) patients had syncope during 15 +/- 10 months after termination of loop monitoring. The external loop recorder was not very useful for arrhythmia detection in patients with syncopal events, no overt heart disease, and a negative tilt table test because the cardiac rhythm was stored in only 1 of 8 (13%) patients with recurrent syncope. Reasons for the low diagnostic yield of external loop recorders were infrequent syncopal events after the baseline evaluation, with rare events during the limited monitoring period in particular, and premature termination or unsuccessful recording in 21% of patients.

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