AI Article Synopsis

  • Syncope is a common issue caused by temporary reductions in blood flow to the brain, often linked to blood pressure problems, though its causes can be hard to pinpoint even after tests.
  • A specific patient with recurrent syncope underwent thorough testing for heart issues, which showed no problems, but had severe narrowing in one carotid artery and experienced temporary weakness on one side of the body.
  • After surgery to improve blood flow in the affected artery, the patient's syncope completely stopped, illustrating a connection between carotid artery stenosis and syncope.

Article Abstract

Syncope is a common clinical entity with variable presentations and often an elusive causal mechanism, even after extensive evaluation. In any case, global cerebral hypoperfusion, resulting from the inability of the circulatory system to maintain blood pressure (BP) at the level necessary to supply blood to the brain efficiently, is the final pathway for syncope. Steno-occlusive carotid artery disease, even if bilateral, does not usually cause syncope. However, the patient presented here had repeated syncope attacks and underwent a thorough examination for suspected cardiac disease, but no abnormality was found. Since there was severe stenosis in the right unilateral internal carotid artery (ICA), but no stenosis in the left ICA or vertebrobasilar artery (VBA), and transient left mild hemiparesis associated with syncope, carotid revascularization surgery for the right ICA was performed, and the repeated syncope attacks completely disappeared after the surgery. The patient's condition improved markedly, and no further episodes of syncope have been reported. We report the relationship between carotid artery stenosis and syncope and discuss its pathomechanism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11290410PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.63567DOI Listing

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