ACUTE NEUROLOGICAL CONDITIONS
88 General Medical Emergencies
2 A faint may be difficult to distinguish from a seizure or acute vertigo, so an
eye-witness account is vital. Always interview ambulance crew or accom-
panying adults.
3 Causes vary from benign to imminently life threatening. The aim is to
always exclude the most serious conditions such as cardiac-related, hypo-
volaemia or subarachnoid haemorrhage:
(i) Cardiac
(a) arrhythmia, either a tachycardia or a bradycardia ‘Stokes–
Adams attack’
(b) myocardial infarction
(c) stenotic valve lesion (especially aortic stenosis)
(d) hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
(e) drug toxicity or side effect
- prolonged QT from sotalol, tricyclics, erythromycin, etc.
- calcium-channel or -blocker.
(ii) Postural (orthostatic) hypotension
(a) haemorrhage or fluid loss: - vomiting and or diarrhoea, with dehydration
- haematemesis and melaena
- concealed haemorrhage (such as an abdominal aortic aneu-
rysm or ectopic pregnancy) - hypoadrenalism (Addison’s), hypopituitarism, pancreatitis
‘third spacing’
(b) autonomic dysfunction - Parkinson’s disease (multiple systems atrophy), diabetes
(c) drugs: - antihypertensives, e.g. angiotensin-converting enzyme
(ACE) inhibitors, prazosin - diuretics
- nitrates
- levodopa
- phenothiazines
- tricyclic antidepressants.
(iii) Vascular
(a) pulmonary embolism
(b) carotid sinus hypersensitivity.
(iv) Neurological
(a) subarachnoid haemorrhage
(b) vertebrobasilar insufficiency, as part of a transient ischaemic
attack (TIA).
(v) Cough, micturition or defecation syncope.