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We have selected the following expert medical opinion based on its clarity, reliability and accuracy. Credit: Sourced from the MSD Manual, Consumer Version; authored by Dr Lyall A. J. Higginson (see below). Please refer to your own medical practitioner for a final perspective, assessment or evaluation.
Light-headedness (called “near-syncope” or “pre-syncope”) is a sense that one is about to faint. Fainting (called “syncope”) is a sudden, brief loss of consciousness during which the person falls to the ground or slumps in a chair followed by a return to consciousness. The person is motionless and limp and usually has cool legs and arms, a weak pulse, and shallow breathing.
Some people feel light-headed or dizzy before they faint. Others may have nausea, sweating, blurred vision or tunnel vision, tingling of lips or fingertips, chest pain, or palpitations. Less often, people faint suddenly, without any warning symptoms.
Seizures, which are a disturbance of the brain's electrical activity, and cardiac arrest, in which the heart completely stops beating, can cause loss of consciousness but are not considered fainting. However, in some people who faint, muscles briefly jerk involuntarily, resembling a seizure.
Fainting can occur in people of any age, but dangerous causes of fainting are more common among older people.
A person cannot lose consciousness unless brain function is generally disturbed. This disturbance usually occurs because overall blood flow to the brain is reduced. Sometimes, however, blood flow is adequate, but the blood does not contain sufficient oxygen or glucose (blood sugar), which the brain needs to function.
Blood flow to the brain can be reduced in several ways. Most often, the cause is something that interferes with the normal return of blood to the heart (and thus reduces blood flow out from the heart). Less often, the cause is a disorder that interferes with blood pumping (typically a heart disorder). Although strokes reduce blood flow to the brain, they only reduce flow to part of the brain. Thus, strokes rarely cause fainting except for the few strokes that involve the part of the brain that maintains consciousness.
The most common causes are:
These common causes nearly always cause fainting only when people are standing up. When they fall down, blood flow to the brain is increased, quickly restoring consciousness, although people may not feel completely normal for a few minutes to a few hours. Some people feel tired or exhausted for several hours. These causes tend not to be serious unless people are injured when they fall.
Most of these causes involve decreased return of blood to the heart. Strong emotion (particularly that triggered by the sight of blood) or pain can activate the vagus nerve. Vagus nerve activation widens blood vessels, reducing the return of blood to the heart, and slows the heart rate. Both of these factors cause light-headedness and sometimes fainting (called vasovagal syncope or neurocardiogenic syncope).
Straining during bowel movements or urination or coughing increases chest pressure. Increased chest pressure can activate the vagus nerve and also reduce the return of blood to the heart—two factors that may cause fainting.
Healthy people may faint when standing still for a long time (most common in soldiers, a phenomenon called parade ground syncope), because the leg muscles have to be active to help return blood to the heart.
Sitting or standing up too quickly can cause fainting, because the change in position causes blood to pool in the legs, resulting in a fall in blood pressure. Normally, the body quickly increases the heart rate and constricts blood vessels to maintain blood pressure. If the body does not compensate in these ways, light-headedness is common, and fainting may rarely occur. Certain brain and spinal cord disorders, prolonged bed rest, and certain drugs (particularly those used to treat high blood pressure) can interfere with this compensation and lead to fainting when standing up.
Hormonal changes in early pregnancy sometimes lead to fainting.
Low blood sugar (hypoglycaemia) initially causes confusion, light-headedness, shakiness, and other symptoms, but if hypoglycaemia is severe or prolonged, people can lose consciousness. Because these other symptoms usually occur before fainting, people with hypoglycaemia usually have some warning before they faint. Usually, the cause of hypoglycaemia is use of drugs for diabetes, particularly insulin. Rarely, people have a tumour that secretes insulin.
Less common but more serious causes include:
If possible, someone who witnessed the faint should provide the doctor with a description of the event because the person who fainted may not remember.
In people who have fainted, certain symptoms and characteristics are cause for concern.
They include:
Although most causes of fainting are not serious, a doctor's evaluation is needed to distinguish serious causes from relatively harmless ones. People who fainted should see a doctor right away, especially if they have any warning signs.
Doctors first ask questions about the person's symptoms and medical history. Doctors then do a physical examination. What doctors find during the history and physical examination often suggests a cause of the fainting and the tests that may need to be done.
Doctors ask about the events leading up to the fainting episode. They ask whether the person was exercising, arguing, or in a potentially emotional situation. They ask whether the person was lying or standing, and, if standing, for how long. They also ask about symptoms that occurred immediately before or after the event, including whether the person felt light-headed or dizzy or experienced nausea, sweating, blurred or tunnel vision, tingling of lips or fingertips, chest pain, or palpitations.
Doctors also ask any witnesses to describe the episode. A sudden, abrupt faint without any warning symptoms or apparent trigger suggests a heart disorder. If fainting is preceded by a brief period of symptoms such as light-headedness, nausea, yawning, blurred vision, or sweating and occurs during a painful or unpleasant situation, it is probably vasovagal syncope, which is not dangerous.
Doctors ask about previous episodes of dizziness or fainting and about other disorders, drugs, or symptoms that may be related to fainting. Doctors also check the person for injuries resulting from the fainting episode.
Then doctors measure the person's vital signs. Heart rate and blood pressure are measured with the person lying down and after 3 minutes of standing. Doctors listen to the heart for signs of an abnormal heart valve or abnormal blood flow. They do a neurologic examination for signs of a stroke.
Heart valve disorders
Cardiomyopathy (disorders affecting heart muscle),
A very slow heart rate (typically less than 35 beats per minute)
A very rapid heart rate (typically over 150 beats per minute)
Pulmonary embolism (blockage of an artery to the lungs by a blood clot)
Heart attack (myocardial infarction)
Severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis)
Low blood sugar level (hypoglycaemia)
Increased pressure in the chest (for example, due to coughing or straining during urination or a bowel movement)
Strong emotion (such as pain, fear, or distress at the sight of blood)
Migraine
Standing for a long time
Pregnancy
Hyperventilation
Medication
Malfunction of the autonomic nervous system
Deconditioning caused by bed rest for many days
Anaemia
Testing typically is done unless people have an obvious, harmless emotional trigger and otherwise feel well.
Doctors choose tests based on the suspected cause:
In general, if fainting results in an injury or has happened several times (particularly within a brief period), more intensive evaluation is warranted:
Specific treatment depends on the cause. For example, people who have fainting caused by an abnormal heart rhythm may need to have a pacemaker and/or defibrillator implanted.
If people see someone faint, they should check whether the person is breathing. If the person is not breathing, bystanders should call for emergency medical assistance and begin cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), including applying an automated external defibrillator (AED) if one is available. Once the person reaches the hospital, doctors will treat the cause of the fainting with drugs or appropriate measures, such as direct-current cardiac defibrillation to restart the heart or drugs or surgery to open blocked arteries.
A person who is breathing should remain lying down. If the person sits upright too rapidly, fainting may recur.
Older people are particularly susceptible to fainting because blood flow to the brain decreases as people age. The most common cause of fainting in older people is inability of blood pressure to rapidly adjust when the person stands. Blood flow decreases because arteries become more rigid and less able to adjust rapidly, physical inactivity reduces the muscle activity that pushes blood through the veins and back to the heart, and heart disease decreases the effectiveness of blood pumping.
In older people, fainting often has more than one cause. For example, the combination of taking several drugs to treat heart disorders or high blood pressure and standing in a hot church during a long or emotional service may lead to fainting even though no single factor might be enough to cause fainting.
Dr Lyall A. J. Higginson
MD
Professor of Medicine, University of Ottawa; Clinical Cardiologist, Division of Cardiology, University of Ottawa Heart Institute
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