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Autonomic nervous system activity during tilt testing in syncopal patients, estimated by power spectral analysis of heart rate variability.

Spectral analysis of heart rate variability (HRV) was used to assess changes in autonomic function before and during postural tilt in 28 syncopal patients: 14 (group A) with positive and 14 (group B) with negative tilting test, and 14 normal controls (group C). Frequency-domain measurements of the high (HF) and low (LF) frequency bands and the ratio LF/HF were derived from Holter recordings, computed by Fast Fourier analysis for 4-minute intervals immediately before tilt testing, immediately after tilting, and just before the end of the test. In group A, the mean values of LF and HF decreased slightly in response to tilting while the LF/HF ratio increased, though these changes were not statistically significant. All parameters showed a statistically significant increase just before the onset of syncope. In group B, there were no significant changes in the parameters measured throughout the test. In group C, there was an increase in the LF and LF/HF ratio and a decrease in the HF immediately after tilting. There were no further significant changes in any of the parameters during the test. Syncopal patients have a different pattern of response to the orthostatic stimulus, in that they do not show the increase in sympathetic tone observed in normal individuals immediately after tilting. In the patients with a positive tilt test, there is a shift in the balance of ANS activity towards the sympathetic system shortly before the onset of syncope.

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