Title of article :
Brain Natriuretic Peptides in Screening of Syncope with Cardiac Origin; a Commentary
Author/Authors :
Feiz-Disfani ، Hamideh - Mashhad University ofMedical Sciences , Kamandi ، Mostafa - Mashhad University ofMedical Sciences , Rahmani ، Kazem - Iran University ofMedical Sciences
Abstract :
Syncope is a serious problem with lifetime prevalence of 35%. It is estimated that 1 3% of referrals to emergency departments and inpatient admissions are due to syncope. The underlying conditions can be cardiac or neurologic. Considering the completely different circumstances ruling the encounters with cardiac and neurologic syncope, in recent years many attempts have beenmade to find the proper tool for differentiating cardiac and noncardiac causes of syncope. The result of which is formation of some clinical decision rules including San Francisco Syncope Rule (SFSR), Osservatorio Epidemiologico sulla Sincope nel Lazio (OESIL),Evaluation of Guidelines in Syncope Study (EGSYS), risk stratification of syncope in the emergency department (Rose), and Boston Syncope Rules. The serum marker brain natriuretic peptide (BNP), which is becoming increasingly established in emergency departments for diagnosis of acute heart failure, can reflect thepresence of a structural heart disease. It seems that BNP could be considered as a screening tool in detection of syncope with cardiac origin. In a study by Wojtowicz J et al. who evaluated BNP in children and adolescents with syncope, there was no significant difference in terms of BNP level between the syncope andcontrol groups. In contrast, Zhang Q et al. concluded that serum BNP is helpful in differentiating cardiac (958.78 § 2443.41 pg/mL) and noncardiac (31.05 § 22.64 pg/mL) syncope. Tanimoto K et al. considered the cutoff value of 40 pg/ml for BNP in differentiating cardiac and noncardiac syncope and found that it had 82% sensitivity and 92% specificity. A significant difference was observed in BNP level of the cardiac group (514 pg/ml) compared to the noncardiac ones (182 pg/ml) in Pfister et al. study. It seems that, more research is needed to clarify this relationship and the variables that might play the role of confounders in a causal inference.More studies on children are required because there is some controversy regarding this relationship. Running studies with accurate methodology, large sample sizes, and in a multicentric fashion could be helpful in this regard.
Keywords :
None
Journal title :
Emergency
Serial Year :
2018
Journal title :
Emergency
Record number :
2475106
Link To Document :
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