“…The diagnosis of POTS requires an exaggerated increase in heart rate (HR) from supine to standing of at least 30 beats per minute for adults (20 years of age or older), or at least 40 bpm for adolescents over the course of 10 min upright, in the absence of orthostatic hypotension during the first 3 min [7]. The diagnosis also requires the presence of chronic orthostatic symptoms such as fatigue, lightheadedness, blurry vision, weakness, cognitive difficulties, and nausea [1][2][3][8][9][10]. Although tilt table testing was the initial method of orthostatic testing in POTS studies [8], in-office passive standing tests (PST), during which the individual leans against a wall [5,11], or active standing tests (without any support) [12][13][14][15] have also been used for several decades.…”