The study aimed to determine whether impedance cardiography-based stroke volume (SV) measurements could be used in optimizing the atrioventricular (AV) interval for dual-chamber pace-makers in patients with preserved AV conduction. The study included 42 consecutive patients (33 males; mean age, 66.8 ± 7.7 years) indicated for a dual-chamber pacemaker or dual-chamber defib-rillator. SV was evaluated during intrinsic AV conduction and sequential AV pacing 4 ± 2 days after implantation by using impedance cardiography. During intrinsic AV node conduction, the mean PQ time was 205 ± 61.9 ms. The mean optimal AV delay in the DDD mode was 103 ± 25 ms. The mean SV was 65.8 ± 14.0 ml during intrinsic conduction and increased to 73.6 ± 14 ml (P < 0.001) after optimizing the AV interval. The mean increase in SV during optimal AV delay was 17 ± 17% in patients with prolonged AV conduction versus 6 ± 5% in patients with normal AV conduction. Dual-chamber pacing without optimizing AV delay may impair hemodynamics (65.8 ± 14.0 ml for the mean SV of the hemodynamically worst AV delay vs. 61.7 ± 11.7 ml for the mean SV of the intrinsic AV conduction; P = 0.001). AV optimizing in patients with a baseline PQ interval of <160 ms did not improve hemodynamics. In patients with dual-chamber pacemakers and a baseline PQ-interval of ≥160 ms, optimizing the AV interval significantly improved the SV. Blindly programming AV delay may be harmful through impairing the hemodynamics.