Motor induced syncope after cerebral infarction: A case report and literature review

Cardio-cerebral syndrome refers to cardiac injury following cranial brain injury, representing a critical complication of stroke associated with high morbidity and mortality. Although exercise treadmill testing is widely utilized for myocardial ischemia evaluation, its role in unmasking neurogenic s...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zihan Zhao, Ranran Wang, Lihua Gao, Meijing Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-06-01
Series:SAGE Open Medical Case Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2050313X251342060
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850128229042487296
author Zihan Zhao
Ranran Wang
Lihua Gao
Meijing Zhang
author_facet Zihan Zhao
Ranran Wang
Lihua Gao
Meijing Zhang
author_sort Zihan Zhao
collection DOAJ
description Cardio-cerebral syndrome refers to cardiac injury following cranial brain injury, representing a critical complication of stroke associated with high morbidity and mortality. Although exercise treadmill testing is widely utilized for myocardial ischemia evaluation, its role in unmasking neurogenic syncope or cardio-cerebral interactions remains under investigation. Existing literature emphasizes that only a small proportion of post-stroke syncope cases undergo comprehensive assessment for combined cerebrovascular–cardiac etiologies, particularly evident in slow-type arrhythmia cases frequently misattributed solely to vasovagal syncope despite potential contributions from brainstem injury or autonomic dysregulation. While most reported post-exercise syncope cases attribute symptoms to vasovagal syncope or common etiologies, underlying cardiovascular/cerebrovascular pathologies are often overlooked, with limited discussion on post-exercise arrhythmia–cerebrovascular disease associations. This report details a unique case of exercise treadmill testing-induced syncope characterized by Brady arrhythmic electrocardiographic changes. Syncope evaluation revealed a newly diagnosed pontine infarction, while cardiac workup excluded structural heart disease, coronary artery stenosis, and Brugada syndrome, underscoring the differential diagnosis challenge between neurogenic and cardiogenic syncope. This case uniquely demonstrates the mechanistic overlap between vasovagal syncope and cerebrovascular injury: although bradyarrhythmia during exercise treadmill testing is typically attributed to cardioinhibitory vasovagal syncope, concurrent pontine infarction likely disrupted brainstem cardio-regulatory centers, sensitizing the patient to vagal hyperactivity. Through systematic analysis of specific arrhythmia–cerebrovascular disease relationships, the final diagnosis identified vasovagal syncope as the primary cause, with cerebral infarction serving as a potential exacerbating factor. This exercise-induced vasovagal syncope complicating stroke provides clinical insights into recognizing overlapping neurovascular–cardiovascular mechanisms during syncope evaluation.
format Article
id doaj-art-0494f7ebe7d64b3cb59fc50c47f090c8
institution OA Journals
issn 2050-313X
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher SAGE Publishing
record_format Article
series SAGE Open Medical Case Reports
spelling doaj-art-0494f7ebe7d64b3cb59fc50c47f090c82025-08-20T02:33:24ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open Medical Case Reports2050-313X2025-06-011310.1177/2050313X251342060Motor induced syncope after cerebral infarction: A case report and literature reviewZihan Zhao0Ranran Wang1Lihua Gao2Meijing Zhang3Aerospace School of Clinical Medicine, Peking University, Beijing, ChinaAerospace School of Clinical Medicine, Peking University, Beijing, ChinaAerospace School of Clinical Medicine, Peking University, Beijing, ChinaAerospace School of Clinical Medicine, Peking University, Beijing, ChinaCardio-cerebral syndrome refers to cardiac injury following cranial brain injury, representing a critical complication of stroke associated with high morbidity and mortality. Although exercise treadmill testing is widely utilized for myocardial ischemia evaluation, its role in unmasking neurogenic syncope or cardio-cerebral interactions remains under investigation. Existing literature emphasizes that only a small proportion of post-stroke syncope cases undergo comprehensive assessment for combined cerebrovascular–cardiac etiologies, particularly evident in slow-type arrhythmia cases frequently misattributed solely to vasovagal syncope despite potential contributions from brainstem injury or autonomic dysregulation. While most reported post-exercise syncope cases attribute symptoms to vasovagal syncope or common etiologies, underlying cardiovascular/cerebrovascular pathologies are often overlooked, with limited discussion on post-exercise arrhythmia–cerebrovascular disease associations. This report details a unique case of exercise treadmill testing-induced syncope characterized by Brady arrhythmic electrocardiographic changes. Syncope evaluation revealed a newly diagnosed pontine infarction, while cardiac workup excluded structural heart disease, coronary artery stenosis, and Brugada syndrome, underscoring the differential diagnosis challenge between neurogenic and cardiogenic syncope. This case uniquely demonstrates the mechanistic overlap between vasovagal syncope and cerebrovascular injury: although bradyarrhythmia during exercise treadmill testing is typically attributed to cardioinhibitory vasovagal syncope, concurrent pontine infarction likely disrupted brainstem cardio-regulatory centers, sensitizing the patient to vagal hyperactivity. Through systematic analysis of specific arrhythmia–cerebrovascular disease relationships, the final diagnosis identified vasovagal syncope as the primary cause, with cerebral infarction serving as a potential exacerbating factor. This exercise-induced vasovagal syncope complicating stroke provides clinical insights into recognizing overlapping neurovascular–cardiovascular mechanisms during syncope evaluation.https://doi.org/10.1177/2050313X251342060
spellingShingle Zihan Zhao
Ranran Wang
Lihua Gao
Meijing Zhang
Motor induced syncope after cerebral infarction: A case report and literature review
SAGE Open Medical Case Reports
title Motor induced syncope after cerebral infarction: A case report and literature review
title_full Motor induced syncope after cerebral infarction: A case report and literature review
title_fullStr Motor induced syncope after cerebral infarction: A case report and literature review
title_full_unstemmed Motor induced syncope after cerebral infarction: A case report and literature review
title_short Motor induced syncope after cerebral infarction: A case report and literature review
title_sort motor induced syncope after cerebral infarction a case report and literature review
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2050313X251342060
work_keys_str_mv AT zihanzhao motorinducedsyncopeaftercerebralinfarctionacasereportandliteraturereview
AT ranranwang motorinducedsyncopeaftercerebralinfarctionacasereportandliteraturereview
AT lihuagao motorinducedsyncopeaftercerebralinfarctionacasereportandliteraturereview
AT meijingzhang motorinducedsyncopeaftercerebralinfarctionacasereportandliteraturereview