Stokes- Adams Syndrome

  • Stokes Adams syndrome (SAS) or Adams-Stokes syndrome is a condition in which a person lose consciousness and faint without warning and can pass out.
  • It is caused due to intermittent complete heart block or due to change in heart rate which causes loss of spontaneous circulation and blood flow to brain.
  • It is named after two Irish physicians, Robert Adams and William Stokes.

Causes of Stokes- Adams Syndrome

  • It may occur after a cardiovascular accident, electrolyte disturbance, disease of AV node, heart disease and rheumatic disease.

Signs and Symptoms of Stokes- Adams Syndrome

  • Main feature is sudden loss of consciousness or fainting without any warning which may last for 10-15 seconds. Before fainting, the skin may turn pale due to hypoperfusion. Abnormal movement like twitching may occur after 15-20 seconds of unconsciousness.
  • Heartbeat may decrease up to 40 beats/minute during the episode.
  • Recovery occurs fast but the patient may feel confused after. On recovery, patient become flushed as heart rapidly pumps oxygenated blood.
  • Multiple episodes of SAS may occur in a single day.

Diagnosis 

  • The diagnosis depends on medical history of patient. Other tests could include an echocardiogram, an exercise stress test or a Holter monitor (a wearable machine that records heart rhythm).
  • The ECG will show complete heart block, AV block or other arrhythmia during the attack.

Treatment

  • Treatment focus on managing the underlying condition that causes the symptoms.
  • Initial treatment involves use of drugs like isoprenaline and epinephrine. The most effective treatment is insertion of permanent cardiac pacemaker.
  • Patients with SAS should be forbidden from performing tasks like cycling, driving, operating machines until the symptoms are managed with the aid of a pacemaker.

References

  1. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh?Db=mesh&Cmd=DetailsSearch&Term=%22Adams-Stokes+Syndrome%22%5BMeSH+Terms%5D
  2. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2272057/