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Dive into the research topics where Sarah Rose is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarah Rose.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2002

Historical criteria that distinguish syncope from seizures.

Robert S. Sheldon; Sarah Rose; Debbie Ritchie; Stuart J. Connolly; Mary-Lou Koshman; Mary Anne Lee; Michael P. Frenneaux; Michael H. Fisher; William Murphy

OBJECTIVES We prospectively sought evidence-based criteria that distinguished between seizures and syncope. BACKGROUND Loss of consciousness is usually due to either seizures or syncope. There are no evidence-based historical diagnostic criteria that distinguish them. METHODS A total of 671 patients with loss of consciousness completed a 118-item historical questionnaire. Data sets were complete for all subjects. The data set was randomly divided into two equal groups. The contributions of symptoms to diagnoses in one group were estimated with logistic regression and point scores were developed. The accuracy of the decision rule was then assessed using split-half analysis. Analyses were performed with and without inclusion of measures of symptom burden, which were the number of losses of consciousness and the duration of the history. The scores were tested using receiver-operator characteristic analysis. RESULTS The causes of loss of consciousness were known satisfactorily in 539 patients and included seizures (n = 102; complex partial epilepsy [50 patients] and primary generalized epilepsy [52 patients]) and syncope (n = 437; tilt-positive vasovagal syncope [267 patients], ventricular tachycardia [90 patients] and other diagnoses such as complete heart block and supraventricular tachycardias [80 patients]). The point score based on symptoms alone correctly classified 94% of patients, diagnosing seizures with 94% sensitivity and 94% specificity. Including symptom burden did not significantly improve accuracy, indicating that the symptoms surrounding the loss of consciousness accurately discriminate between seizures and syncope. CONCLUSIONS A simple point score of historical features distinguishes syncope from seizures with very high sensitivity and specificity.


Circulation | 1996

Risk Factors for Syncope Recurrence After a Positive Tilt-Table⇓ Test in Patients With Syncope

Robert S. Sheldon; Sarah Rose; Patricia Flanagan; Mary Lou Koshman; Shawn Killam

BACKGROUND Recent work with head-up tilt-table testing has suggested that many patients with syncope may have recurrent neurally mediated episodes of bradycardia, hypotension, or both. The purpose of this study was to determine how to identify patients at high risk of a recurrence of neuromediated syncope after a positive isoproterenol/tilt-table test. METHODS AND RESULTS A cohort of 101 drug-free patients in a university hospital outpatient clinic with syncope and a positive isoproterenol/tilt-table test underwent baseline assessment of demographic variables, symptomatic burden, and hemodynamic and clinical responses to tilt testing. The primary outcome measure was the time to the first recurrent syncopal spell. The actuarial probabilities of remaining syncope free after 1 and 2 years were 72% and 60%, respectively. Multivariate proportional hazards analysis demonstrated that the most powerful predictor of a recurrence of syncope was the logarithm of the number of preceding syncopal spells (P<.001). Other predictive variables included the duration of syncopal symptoms, tilt test symptomatic outcome, and trough heart rate. The probability of a recurrence of syncope also varied with the logarithm of the frequency of preceding spells (P=.008). The median frequency of pretest spells was 0.3/month; after the tilt test, the median frequency dropped approximately 90% to 0.03 per month. CONCLUSIONS The risk of a recurrence of syncope after a positive tilt-table test can be predicted with simple pretest and intratest variables.


Circulation | 2006

Prevention of Syncope Trial (POST): a randomized, placebo-controlled study of metoprolol in the prevention of vasovagal syncope.

Robert S. Sheldon; Stuart J. Connolly; Sarah Rose; Thomas Klingenheben; Andrew D. Krahn; Carlos A. Morillo; Mario Talajic; Teresa Ku; Fetnat M. Fouad-Tarazi; Debbie Ritchie; Mary-Lou Koshman

Background— Previous studies that assessed the effects of &bgr;-blockers in preventing vasovagal syncope provided mixed results. Our goal was to determine whether treatment with metoprolol reduces the risk of syncope in patients with vasovagal syncope. Methods and Results— The multicenter Prevention of Syncope Trial (POST) was a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, trial designed to assess the effects of metoprolol in vasovagal syncope over a 1-year treatment period. Two prespecified analyses included the relationships of age and initial tilt-test results to any benefit from metoprolol. All patients had >2 syncopal spells and a positive tilt test. Randomization was stratified according to ages <42 and ≥42 years. Patients received either metoprolol or matching placebo at highest-tolerated doses from 25 to 200 mg daily. The main outcome measure was the first recurrence of syncope. A total of 208 patients (mean age 42±18 years) with a median of 9 syncopal spells over a median of 11 years were randomized, 108 to receive metoprolol and 100 to the placebo group. There were 75 patients with ≥1 recurrence of syncope. The likelihood of recurrent syncope was not significantly different between groups. Neither the age of the patient nor the need for isoproterenol to produce a positive tilt test predicted subsequent significant benefit from metoprolol. Conclusions— Metoprolol was not effective in preventing vasovagal syncope in the study population.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1996

Effect of beta blockers on the time to first syncope recurrence in patients after a positive isoproterenol tilt table test.

Robert S. Sheldon; Sarah Rose; Patricia Flanagan; Mary Lou Koshman; Shawn Killam

Isoproterenol-headup tilt table testing provides a diagnosis of neuromediated syncope in many patients who faint. The involvement of beta-adrenoceptor stimulation in the provocation of syncope suggests that beta blockers might chronically prevent syncope. To assess this, a cohort of 153 syncope patients (age 39 +/- 20 years) underwent baseline assessment of demographic variables, symptomatic burden, and hemodynamic and clinical responses to tilt testing. Fifty-two patients then received beta blockers, and 101 did not receive drug therapy. The primary outcome was the time to the first recurrent syncopal spell. Actuarial survival analysis was used. Syncope recurred in 17 of 52 patients who received beta blockers and in 28 of 101 patients who were untreated. The actuarial probability of remaining free of syncope was similar in both groups. For example, the probability of remaining free of syncope 12 months following the tilt test was 0.72 in both populations. Thus, treatment with beta blockers may not have a significant effect in preventing syncope recurrence following a positive tilt test.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1998

Effect of Dual-Chamber Pacing With Automatic Rate-Drop Sensing on Recurrent Neurally Mediated Syncope

Robert S. Sheldon; Mary Lou Koshman; Wendy Wilson; Theresa M. Kieser; Sarah Rose

We tested the hypotheses that a dual-chamber pacemaker that paces when intrinsic rate drops abruptly would reduce the number of syncopal spells and improve the quality of life in patients with highly recurrent neurally mediated syncope. Twelve patients with highly frequent neurally mediated syncope and at least 1 syncopal spell after tilt testing received dual-chamber pacemakers with automatic rate-drop sensing. The pacemakers were implanted 17+/-26 months after tilt testing, and the patients then were followed for 12+/-2 months. We compared the time to the first recurrence of syncope, syncope frequency, and quality of life for the 2 periods between tilt testing and pacemaker implantation, and between implantation and last follow-up. Only 6 of 12 patients fainted after pacemaker insertion. The median time to syncope recurrence before and after pacing was 7 days and 5.3 months, respectively. The geometric mean frequency of faints before and after pacing was 5.0 spells/month (95% confidence interval 2.7 to 9.2) and 0.30 spells/month (95% confidence interval 0.2 to 0.4), p <0.001. After 6 months the mean perception of health on the 100-point EuroQol scale rose from 55 to 82 (p = 0.003), and the general health perception on the SF-36 scale rose from 51 to 72 (p = 0.005). Permanent dual-chamber pacing with automatic rate-drop sensing in patients with highly frequent syncope is associated with a marked reduction in the likelihood of syncope and a marked improvement in quality of life.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1997

Comparison of Patients With Syncope of Unknown Cause Having Negative or Positive Tilt-Table Tests

Robert S. Sheldon; Sarah Rose; Mary Lou Koshman

Many patients without an identified cause of syncope have negative tilt tests. We hypothesized that many of these might be falsely negative tilt tests. If so, then patients with negative and positive tilt tests should have similar pretest clinical characteristics, post-test probabilities of remaining free of syncope, and similar risk factors for syncope recurrence after the tilt-table test. Demographic characteristics and historic features were compared between 153 syncope patients with a positive tilt test, and 74 syncope patients with a negative tilt test and no obvious cause of syncope. Patients with negative and positive tests had similar numbers of syncopal spells, durations of symptoms, frequency of spells, and peak heart rate during tilt test, but patients with negative tests were older (48 +/- 19 vs 39 +/- 20 years). The actuarial probabilities of remaining free of syncope were very similar, with 2-year risks of syncope of 41% and 37% in patients with negative and positive tests, respectively. The regression coefficients of risk factors predicting syncope recurrence were similar for both populations, and the confidence intervals of all regression coefficients decreased when the populations were combined. The outcome of tilt testing did not predict the clinical outcome of patients. Patients with syncope and either negative or positive tilt tests share many pretest and post-test clinical characteristics, suggesting that they may be part of the same population.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1996

Abnormal reflex venous function in patients with neuromediated syncope

Dante E. Manyari; Sarah Rose; John V. Tyberg; Robert S. Sheldon

OBJECTIVES We sought to compare the forearm reflex venous response to mental arithmetic stress in patients with neuromediated syncope and in normal subjects. BACKGROUND Patients with neuromediated syncope have a paradoxic arterial vasodilation in response to stressors that usually provoke vasoconstriction. Given the postulated role of diminished preload in provoking the reflex responses resulting in syncope, we hypothesized that mental stress might provoke paradoxic reflex venodilation in patients with neuromediated syncope. METHODS Twelve normal subjects (mean age [+/-SD] 47 +/- 9 years) and 27 patients with neuromediated syncope (mean age 42 +/- 13 years) were studied before and during a mental arithmetic stress test. Forearm venous pressure-volume relations were determined by using radionuclide plethysmography. RESULTS During mental arithmetic stress, heart rate and systolic and diastolic blood pressure increased significantly and similarly both in normal subjects and in patients with neuromediated syncope. The heart rate and blood pressure changes were qualitatively similar in both groups. However, with mental arithmetic stress, forearm venoconstriction of 13 +/- 2% (mean +/- SEM) was noted in normal subjects (p < 0.001) but not in patients with neuromediated syncope (mean 2%, p = NS). This group response of patients with neuromediated syncope did not result from a lack of individual responses but occurred because these patients had a wide range of responses. The normal physiologic and methodologic variability of the method was +/- 4%. Thirteen of the 27 patients with neuromediated syncope had forearm venoconstriction of 14.5 +/- 6.8% during mental arithmetic stress, whereas 7 had paradoxic forearm venodilation of 14.6 +/- 8.8%, and 7 were considered nonresponders (-1.3 +/- 3.4%). Thus, 14 (52%) of the 27 patients with syncope did not have normal vasoconstriction in response to mental stress. CONCLUSIONS Patients with neuromediated syncope have an abnormal range of forearm venomotor responses to mental arithmetic stress. Reflex control of the veins may play an important role in the pathogenesis of neuromediated syncope.


The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry | 2001

Attachment disorganization and dissociative symptoms in clinically treated adolescents

Malcolm West; Kenneth S. Adam; Sheila Spreng; Sarah Rose

Objective: To examine the association of unresolved and unclassifiable attachment with dissociative symptomotology in a sample of 133 adolescents in psychiatric treatment. Method: The study compared 69 adolescents who were unresolved and unclassifiable with 64 adolescents who were not unresolved and unclassifiable. Attachment organization was assessed using the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI). Dissociative symptomotology was assessed using a scale derived from the Youth Self Report (YSR) behaviour checklist. Results: A continuing unresolved and unclassifiable response to attachment-related trauma was correlated with dissociative symptomotology for both male and female adolescents. Conclusions: Cognitive disorganization may be an important variable mediating between the effects of earlier traumatic caregiving experiences and later dissociative symptoms.


The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry | 1999

Relationship between attachment-felt security and history of suicidal behaviours in clinical adolescents.

Malcolm West; Sheila Spreng; Sarah Rose; Kenneth S. Adam

Objective: This study was designed to test the hypothesis that adolescents who perceive their attachment figures as unavailable (low felt security) would be overrepresented in the case group of adolescents with a history of suicidal behaviours. Method: One hundred and eighty-seven adolescents in psychiatric treatment participated in this retrospective case-comparison study of attachment-felt security and history of suicidal behaviours. All participants completed the following measures: Adolescent Attachment Questionnaire, Perceived Social Support From Friends Scale, Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, Beck Hopelessness Scale, the depression syndrome scale of the Youth Self Report, and Adams Suicidal Ideation and Behavior protocol. Results: The comparison group comprised 101 adolescents who had never experienced suicidal ideation or behaviour; the case group included 86 adolescents with a history of suicidal behaviour. We found that perceived unavailability and high levels of depressive symptomatology were predictive of suicidal behaviours. We also found a strong association between being older and having high levels of angry distress in adolescents with a history of suicidal behaviours. Conclusion: The advantage of including an assessment of parent-adolescent attachment with clinical adolescents is noted.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1996

Isoproterenol Tilt-Table Testing in Patients With Syncope and Structural Heart Disease *

Robert Sheldon; Sarah Rose; Mary Lou Koshman

We studied 55 patients with syncope and structural heart disease using both tilt-table testing and electrophysiologic studies. Although sustained ventricular tachycardia was found in 21 of 55 patients (38%), and neuromediated syncope in 18 of 51 patients (35%), only 16% of patients with ventricular tachycardia had a positive tilt-table test.

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Stuart J. Connolly

Population Health Research Institute

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Andrew D. Krahn

University of British Columbia

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