Reflex asystolic syncope

Reflex asystolic syncope
Other namesReflex anoxic seizure

Reflex asystolic syncope (RAS) is a form of syncope encountered mainly, but not exclusively, in young children. Reflex anoxic seizures are not epileptic seizures or epilepsy.[1] This is usually a consequence of a reduction in cerebral perfusion by oxygenated blood. It can be a result of either a sudden reduction in the blood flow to the brain, a drop in the oxygen content of the blood supplying the brain, or a combination of the two. Syncope can have different meanings ranging from transient loss of consciousness, usually accompanied by a decrease or loss in postural tone (the principal manifestations of "simple faints"), to tonic and myoclonic events and nonepileptic spasms.

  1. ^ Prasher, Vee P.; Kerr, Mike P., eds. (2008). Epilepsy and intellectual disabilities. New York: Springer. p. 63. ISBN 9781848002593.