## Correct Answer: C. ECG to rule out atrial fibrillation This clinical presentation—acute onset dizziness with transient loss of consciousness (syncope) lasting seconds followed by complete recovery—is a classic syncope scenario in an elderly patient. The key discriminator is the **sudden onset and complete recovery**, which points to a cardiac arrhythmia rather than a structural neurological cause. Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common arrhythmia in the elderly and frequently presents with syncope due to rapid ventricular response causing decreased cerebral perfusion. In India, AF prevalence increases significantly after age 60, especially in patients with hypertension and diabetes. The ECG is the **first-line, non-invasive investigation** for syncope evaluation per Harrison and Indian cardiological practice guidelines. It can detect AF, bradyarrhythmias, prolonged QT, and other electrical abnormalities that cause syncope. A normal ECG does not exclude paroxysmal AF (which may not be present during the recording), but it remains the essential initial test. The patient's age, sudden onset, and brief unconsciousness make cardiac syncope the leading diagnosis, making ECG to rule out AF the most appropriate and evidence-based statement among the options. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Vestibular neuritis is a possible condition that can cause these symptoms** — Vestibular neuritis causes vertigo (spinning sensation) and imbalance, NOT syncope with loss of consciousness. While dizziness is mentioned, the key feature here is **transient loss of consciousness with complete recovery**—this is syncope, not vertigo. Vestibular neuritis does not cause syncope. This is an NBE trap confusing dizziness (a broad term) with syncope (a specific cardiovascular emergency). **B. If ECG is normal, CT scan should be done** — This reverses the diagnostic algorithm. A normal ECG does **not** mandate neuroimaging in syncope. CT/MRI is indicated only if there are focal neurological deficits, head trauma, or seizure features—none present here. The correct approach is ECG first, then Holter/event monitoring if ECG is normal. This option represents a common diagnostic error: jumping to expensive imaging without clinical justification. **D. Tilt-table testing** — Tilt-table testing is used to diagnose **vasovagal syncope** (neurocardiogenic syncope), which typically occurs in younger patients with prodromal symptoms (nausea, sweating, pallor) and slower recovery. This 60-year-old with **sudden onset and no prodrome** has a high pretest probability of cardiac syncope, not vasovagal syncope. Tilt-table is not first-line in elderly patients with sudden syncope; ECG is. ## High-Yield Facts - **Syncope = transient loss of consciousness with spontaneous recovery**; in elderly, assume cardiac cause until proven otherwise. - **Atrial fibrillation** is the most common arrhythmia causing syncope in patients >60 years in India; prevalence increases with hypertension and diabetes. - **ECG is the first-line investigation** for syncope evaluation; can detect AF, bradycardia, prolonged QT, and Brugada pattern. - **Paroxysmal AF may not be evident on single ECG**; Holter/event monitoring is next step if ECG normal but suspicion remains high. - **Prodromal symptoms** (nausea, sweating, pallor) suggest vasovagal syncope; **sudden onset without prodrome** suggests arrhythmia. ## Mnemonics **SYNCOPE FIRST-LINE WORKUP** **E**CG → **H**olter → **E**chocardiogram → **S**pecialised testing (tilt, EP study). Start with ECG in all elderly syncope patients. **CARDIAC vs VASOVAGAL SYNCOPE** **CARDIAC**: Sudden onset, no prodrome, elderly, brief recovery. **VASOVAGAL**: Prodromal symptoms (nausea/sweating), younger, slower recovery. Use this to decide: ECG first (cardiac) vs tilt-table (vasovagal). ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "dizziness" with vestibular causes to trap students who conflate dizziness (a broad symptom) with syncope (a specific loss of consciousness). The key discriminator—**transient loss of consciousness with complete recovery**—must be recognized as syncope, not vertigo, to select the cardiac workup. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian outpatient practice, elderly patients presenting with "dizziness" and brief unconsciousness are often misdiagnosed as neurological until an ECG reveals paroxysmal AF or bradycardia. Always obtain an ECG before ordering neuroimaging in syncope—it is cheaper, faster, and identifies the majority of life-threatening causes in this age group. _Reference: Harrison Ch. 127 (Syncope); Robbins Ch. 12 (Cardiovascular Pathology); KD Tripathi Ch. 6 (Cardiac Arrhythmias)_
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