The acute hemodynamic effect of dual-chamber pacing: atrioventricular stimulation versus intrinsic atrioventricular conduction
Publication Type
Original research
Authors
Fulltext
Download

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.

Journal
Title
Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (PMPJ)
Publisher
An-Najah National University
Publisher Country
Palestine
Indexing
Scopus
Impact Factor
None
Publication Type
Both (Printed and Online)
Volume
--
Year
--
Pages
--