TY - JOUR
T1 - Syncope in an elderly, institutionalised population
T2 - Prevalence, incidence, and associated risk
AU - Lipsitz, Lewis A.
AU - Wei, Jeanne Y.
AU - Rowe, John W.
N1 - Funding Information:
Correspondence to: Lewis A. Lipsitz, MD, Hebrew Rehabilitation Center for Aged, 1200 Centre Street, Boston (Roslindale), MA 02131. This work was supported by the Physician-in-Chiefs Fund, Hebrew Rehabilitation Center for Aged, and by grants (AG00599, HL29295 and a NIA Teaching Nursing Home Award AG04390) from the US Public Health Service. Dr Lipsitz was supported in part by an Administration on Aging Geriatric Fellowship Award (AT-20251) and a National Institute on Aging Academic Award (AG00213). Dr Rowe is recipient of a Geriatric Medicine Academic Award (AG00056) from the National Institute on Aging.
PY - 1985/4
Y1 - 1985/4
N2 - Although syncope is common in the elderly, little is known of its epidemiology and prognosis. A retrospective analysis of syncope in 711 very old (mean age 87 years) institutionalised patients revealed a 10 year prevalence of 23 per cent and one year incidence of 7 per cent. A two-year prospective follow-up of this population revea1çd a yearly incidence of 6 per cent and recurrence rate of 30 per cent. Of 67 patients who developed syncope during follow-up, a cause was established in 46; 14 (21 per cent) had cardiac and 32 (48 per cent) had non-cardiac aetiologies. Twenty-one cases (31 per cent) remained unexplained. Patients who developed syncope were initially more functionally disabled (p = 0.003) and subsequently changed function more frequently (p = 0.03) than those with out the development of syncope, but two year rates of hospitalisation and death were not different between the two groups. Life-table survival analysis showed no difference in the mortality of subgroups with cardiac, non-cardiac, and unknown aetiologies of syncope. Syncope is common in multiply impaired elders and is likely a manifestation of co-morbid disease rather than an independent contributor to mortality.
AB - Although syncope is common in the elderly, little is known of its epidemiology and prognosis. A retrospective analysis of syncope in 711 very old (mean age 87 years) institutionalised patients revealed a 10 year prevalence of 23 per cent and one year incidence of 7 per cent. A two-year prospective follow-up of this population revea1çd a yearly incidence of 6 per cent and recurrence rate of 30 per cent. Of 67 patients who developed syncope during follow-up, a cause was established in 46; 14 (21 per cent) had cardiac and 32 (48 per cent) had non-cardiac aetiologies. Twenty-one cases (31 per cent) remained unexplained. Patients who developed syncope were initially more functionally disabled (p = 0.003) and subsequently changed function more frequently (p = 0.03) than those with out the development of syncope, but two year rates of hospitalisation and death were not different between the two groups. Life-table survival analysis showed no difference in the mortality of subgroups with cardiac, non-cardiac, and unknown aetiologies of syncope. Syncope is common in multiply impaired elders and is likely a manifestation of co-morbid disease rather than an independent contributor to mortality.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0022002542&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/oxfordjournals.qjmed.a067852
DO - 10.1093/oxfordjournals.qjmed.a067852
M3 - Article
C2 - 4011842
AN - SCOPUS:0022002542
SN - 1460-2725
VL - 55
SP - 45
EP - 54
JO - QJM - Monthly Journal of the Association of Physicians
JF - QJM - Monthly Journal of the Association of Physicians
IS - 1
ER -