Fifty-eight patients (29 M, 29 F, mean age 60.8 +/- 16 years) with unexplained syncope at the end of a complete clinical and electrophysiological evaluation, were followed for a mean period of 36.6 +/- 20.5 months (median: 30.5 months). Structural heart disease was present in 32 patients (55.2%). The standard ECG was normal in 24 (41.4%) and showed sinus bradycardia (greater than 40 m-1) and/or first degree AV block and/or intraventricular conduction disturbances in 29 patients (50%). During follow-up, recurrences of syncope were observed in 11 of 43 untreated patients (25.6%), three of seven electrically treated patients (42.9%) and two of eight pharmacologically treated patients (25%). The cause of these recurrences was cardiac in one (1.7%), non-cardiac in 10 (17.2%) and remained undetermined in five (8.6%). Sudden death occurred in only one patient (1.7%), who was receiving chronic amiodarone therapy. These results indicate that (1) syncopal recurrences may occur in an appreciable percentage of patients with unexplained syncope and a negative electrophysiologic study during a relatively long-term follow-up, (2) syncopal recurrences, when they occur, are generally due to a non-cardiac cause, (3) sudden death is an occasional and rare event in this patient population and (4) empirical prophylactic treatment with a permanent pacemaker or antiarrhythmic drugs does not usually prevent complications during the follow-up.
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