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The efficacy of the use of atropine in children with reflex anoxic syncope during pallid breath-holding spells: can cardiac pacemaker implantation be avoided?

Marieke DonnéKristof VandekerckhoveHans De Wilde
Published in: Cardiology in the young (2024)
We consider atropine a safe and effective treatment to manage reflex anoxic syncope with similar success rate to pacemaker implantation. However, pacemaker implantation entails substantial risk for complications (up to 25%) such as infection or technical problems and morbidity such as scar formation. This might be considered redundant for a benign and temporary condition, certainly given the possibility of other efficient treatment options. Consequently, we recommend atropine treatment over implantation of a cardiac pacemaker in children with severe reflex anoxic syncope.
Keyphrases
  • pulmonary embolism
  • vena cava
  • young adults
  • mental health
  • heart failure
  • early onset
  • combination therapy
  • inferior vena cava
  • replacement therapy
  • drug induced