Palpitation
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Etiology/cause
In one cohort study, causes were identified in 84%:[1]
- Cardiac arrhythmia in 43%
- Psychiatric, usually an anxiety disorder, in 31%
- Miscellaneous in 10%
Evaluation
Medical history taking
Helpful findings in one cohort study were:[1]
- Duration more than 5 minutes suggested cardiac arrhythmia
- More than 5 total symptoms suggest psychiatric causes. A similar observation (two or more prodromal symptoms) has been observed for determining the cause of syncope.[2]
Palpitations followed by syncope suggest cardiac arrhythmia.[3]
Physical examination
A heart rate < 60 or > 100 beats per minutes suggests cardiac arrhythmia.[4]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Weber BE, Kapoor WN (1996). "Evaluation and outcomes of patients with palpitations.". Am J Med 100 (2): 138-48. PMID 8629647.
- ↑ Graf D, Schlaepfer J, Gollut E, van Melle G, Mischler C, Fromer M et al. (2008). "Predictive models of syncope causes in an outpatient clinic.". Int J Cardiol 123 (3): 249-56. DOI:10.1016/j.ijcard.2006.12.007. PMID 17397948. Research Blogging.
- ↑ Del Rosso A, Ungar A, Maggi R, Giada F, Petix NR, De Santo T et al. (2008). "Clinical predictors of cardiac syncope at initial evaluation in patients referred urgently to a general hospital: the EGSYS score.". Heart 94 (12): 1620-6. DOI:10.1136/hrt.2008.143123. PMID 18519550. Research Blogging. Review in: Evid Based Med. 2009 Jun;14(3):91
- ↑ Hoefman E, Boer KR, van Weert HC, Reitsma JB, Koster RW, Bindels PJ (2007). "Predictive value of history taking and physical examination in diagnosing arrhythmias in general practice.". Fam Pract 24 (6): 636-41. DOI:10.1093/fampra/cmm056. PMID 17986627. Research Blogging.