POTS

Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome

A syndrome typically occuring in young women, experienced as vague symptoms (light headed, palpitations, brain fog, etc) in standing position and relieved by sitting or lying

Several theories about physiology – low volume, inadequate vasoconstriction, heightened noradrenergic response

Underlying cause ?genetic ?deconditioning ?autoimmune

Commonly associated with hypermobilitiy, fibromyalgia,  migraine, etc

Triggers – viral (including covid),  pre-menstrual

Malmo POTS survey – score > 42 has high sensitivity and specificity for POTS

https://potsfoundation.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/MALMO-MAPS-one-page.pdf

Active Stand Test – HR/BP after 5min supine. Repeat after 3min stand, 5min stand up to 10min. Diagnostic if HR > 30 and BP drop < 20/10. 

https://potsfoundation.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Active-Stand-Test-Interpretation-APF-2025.pdf

Investigations – ECG, Holter, Echo, ABPM, Bloods (FBC, ELFT, TFT, cortisol, BHCG, ferritin). MRI is postural headache

Management

Lifestyle- 3L fluid/day, Salt 10g/day, compression stockings full-leg (15-20mmHg) or abdominal binder, graded exercise (POTS-aware ex physiologist)

Drug treatment

Betablockers – propranolol 10mg BD -> 20mg BD

Ivabradine 2.5mg BD -> 5mg BD

Fludrocortisone 50mcg daily -> 100mcg. Monitor BP and hypokalaemia

Midodrine – can be used on demand. 2.5mg up to TDS. Onset 20min, lasts 3 hrs. Expensive

Pyridostigmine (mestinon) – promotes vasoconstriction

 

Useful website

POTS For Practitioners