Abstract
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Although an implantable loop recorder (ILR) is a valuable tool for investigation of unexplained syncope, there are limited data regarding time course to diagnosis and predictors of serious arrhythmias as a cause of unexplained syncope. We sought to investigate diagnosis rate by time period after ILR implantation and identify predictors of serious arrhythmias in patients with unexplained syncope. METHODS: We identified 394 patients who received ILR implantation for unexplained syncope enrolled in the Korean ILR registry. RESULTS: Serious arrhythmias were documented in 205 patients (52.0%). One hundred seventy-two patients (43.7%) had sick sinus-node syndrome (SSS), 24 (6.1%) had atrioventricular block, and nine (2.3%) had ventricular arrhythmia. Of these, 48 (23.4%) and 77 (37.6%) were diagnosed within two weeks and one month after ILR implantation, respectively. Median time to diagnosis was 62 days. In multivariable analysis, left atrial volume index (LAVI) ≥ 34 mL/m2 (hazard ratio [HR] 1.582), hypertension (HR 1.788), sinus bradycardia with a heartrate less than 60 beats per minute (HR 1.762), and LAVI ≥ 34 mL/m2 combined with sinus bradycardia (HR 1.911) were independent predictors of SSS. Cumulative detection rate of SSS was significantly higher in patients with LAVI ≥ 34 mL/m2 than those with LAVI < 34 mL/m2 (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: More than half of patients with unexplained syncope had serious arrhythmias, and more than one-third of these arrhythmias were diagnosed within one month after ILR implantation. LAVI combined with sinus bradycardia may be a useful predictor of SSS as a cause of unexplained syncope.