Syncope due to glossopharyngeal neuralgia or other visceral disease: this type of syncope is rare. Transient syncope occurs during lingual-pharyngeal neuralgia, biliary colic, renal colic, bronchial or gastrointestinal endoscopy. So how should patients prevent accidents if they develop syncope due to glossopharyngeal neuralgia or other visceral diseases? Here is a brief description: If you feel that syncope is imminent, two simple methods can be used to avoid loss of consciousness, assuming the etiology is a temporary drop in blood pressure. In the first method, cross your legs and compress your abdominal muscles to increase blood pressure by squeezing the leg veins (venous blood flow in the legs to the heart) and stimulating the nervous system to constrict the arteries (increase blood pressure). In the second method, grasp the other hand with one hand and then stretch your arms out straight. Drinking two glasses of water, although not immediately effective, may prevent fainting within 30 to 60 minutes, probably due to the replenishment of blood volume. A similar suggestion is to sit down and bury your head between your legs, which will make you feel better. Sitting down can prevent fainting, and burying your head between your legs will give your brain more blood. If syncope has occurred, it is best to have the patient lie flat on the floor. This way the cardiovascular system does not have to fight gravity. Also turn the patient’s body to the side to avoid accidental aspiration. It is not right to make a person sit after a syncope because then the blood has to flow upward to the brain. Patients presenting with glossopharyngeal neuralgia can be treated with medications: 1. Tocopherol sodium orally. 2. Vitamin B1, B12, etc. Marsupial orally. Drug therapy often achieves relatively satisfactory clinical results in the early stages of the disease, but as the pain increases, the drugs often gradually lose their effect after several months or years.