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rab — Private Doctor on Call

Acute symptoms · Berlin

Acute circulatory problems

Acute circulatory problems is an acute medical condition that RAB Arztbesuche treats with a licensed physician on a home visit anywhere in Berlin — daily from 6 am to midnight, usually within 60 to 90 minutes.

Vision blacking out on standing, brief loss of consciousness, dizziness, weakness — circulatory problems can be banal or have serious cardiac causes. Our specialist physicians come daily from 6 am to midnight, record an ECG and classify the symptoms.

Medically reviewed by Susanne Reiche · Last reviewed

Acute circulatory problems in Berlin — the central question

Syncope — transient loss of consciousness from reduced cerebral perfusion — and its milder precursors (pre-syncope, vision blacking on standing, dizziness on rising) are common reasons for our visits. In Berlin we see the full spectrum: young adults with vasovagal syncope at the sight of blood, older patients with orthostatic dysregulation on new medication, patients with arrhythmia signs. The central clinical question is: is this a harmless vasovagal episode — or a cardiac event needing further work-up?

The distinction is not trivial. Certain features — syncope without prodrome, syncope on exertion, syncope with injury, prior cardiac disease, ECG abnormalities — demand prompt cardiology assessment. On the house call we record a 12-lead ECG and decide with you whether outpatient work-up suffices or whether cardiology hospital admission is the better path.

What happens during the house call

We ask about onset, trigger, prodrome, injuries, accompanying symptoms and medication. We measure blood pressure supine and after rapid standing (Schellong test), check heart rate, oxygen saturation, auscultate heart and lungs and run a basic neurological exam. A 12-lead ECG captures arrhythmia, bundle branch block, QT prolongation or ischaemic signs. For classical vasovagal syncope without cardiac signs we explain behavioural strategies (slow standing, adequate hydration, trigger avoidance). For orthostatic dysregulation we review medications that lower blood pressure and adjust therapy. With cardiac signs we organise prompt cardiology work-up or hospital admission.

When cardiology follow-up is appropriate

For any syncope with unclear cause, cardiac history, ECG abnormalities or recurrence we recommend cardiology review. This typically includes echocardiography, Holter monitoring, possibly exercise test or implantable loop recorder. We issue the referral, name suitable cardiology practices in your district and coordinate with the cardiologist.

How the house call works

On first contact we screen for red flags of cardiac or neurological cause. With clear emergency signs we direct you to 112 or hospital. Otherwise we dispatch the next available specialist — typically a 60- to 90-minute arrival.

On site we perform the structured exam with Schellong test and ECG, discuss findings and next steps. You receive medication adjustments where relevant, a cardiology referral and written escalation criteria.

Billing and insurance

We bill according to the German private medical fee schedule (GOÄ) via our Privatärztliche Verrechnungsstelle. House call, internal medicine exam, Schellong test, ECG and administered medication are itemised separately. German private health insurance and Beihilfe schemes typically reimburse these positions in full.

We can issue an English invoice on request and remain reachable by phone for billing questions after the visit.

Emergency? Dial the emergency number

If unconscious, with severe chest pain, breathlessness or heavy bleeding, dial 112 immediately. Our service complements the emergency services — it does not replace them.

Case profiles

Typical scenarios

Vasovagal syncope in a young adult

A 28-year-old in Friedrichshain briefly loses consciousness after a blood draw. We examine, record an ECG and discuss future strategies.

Orthostasis on new blood pressure therapy

A 72-year-old in Charlottenburg feels dizzy on standing under new medication. We review and adjust the regimen.

Hotel guest with weakness after a long-haul flight

A business traveller in a Mitte hotel has acute circulatory weakness after a long flight. We check hydration, orthostasis and cardiac signs — IV fluids if indicated.

Repeated syncope — cardiology work-up

A patient in Pankow has had several brief blackouts in recent weeks. We record an ECG and organise cardiology review.

Frequently asked questions

Should I go to hospital after syncope?

Yes if syncope is accompanied by injury, chest pain, breathlessness, neurological deficits or occurs during exertion. With a clear vasovagal episode in an otherwise healthy person, outpatient work-up is usually enough.

Can you record an ECG at home?

Yes. We record a 12-lead ECG on site and can assess arrhythmias, ischaemic signs and other abnormalities directly.

Should I stop my blood pressure tablets?

Not on your own. We review the current regimen and adjust it on clinical assessment — often dose reduction or a switch is wiser than stopping.

What can I do myself?

For orthostatic dysregulation: stand up slowly, briefly move the legs before rising, drink enough (at least 1.5 to 2 litres per day), use compression stockings if needed.

Book now or call

Get in touch — we will arrange a doctor for your house call regarding Acute circulatory problems.

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