Patients with voiding syncope are advised to get up to urinate in a sitting position and then slowly get up to stand. While urinating patients can do deep breathing movements to prevent excessive breath holding and patients should be careful not to hold urine as much as possible. If syncope attacks are frequent, you can take a sitting or squatting urine. After syncope occurs, the patient should be made to lie down as much as possible, and the patient’s state of consciousness should be observed. If cranial trauma or cerebral hemorrhage is suspected, the patient should be sent to the hospital for further treatment as soon as possible. Urinary syncope is usually seen in young men and occurs during or at the end of urination and lasts 1-2 minutes before the patient awakens on his own without sequelae. The mechanism of this disease may be a combination of factors, including the instability of one’s own autonomic nerves, sudden changes in body position, breath-holding action during urination, or through the vagal reflex leading to a decrease in cardiac output and blood pressure, thus causing ischemia and hypoxia in the brain.