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Journal ArticleDOI

Closed-loop stimulation using intracardiac impedance as a sensor principle: correlation of right ventricular dP/dtmax and intracardiac impedance during dobutamine stress test.

TLDR
The results suggest that “inotropy‐sensing” via measurement of intracardiac impedance is highly accurate and seems to be a promising sensor principle for physiological rate adaptation in a closed‐loop pacing system.
Abstract
OSSWALD, S., et al.: Closed-Loop Stimulation Using Intracardiac Impedance as a Sensor Principle: Correlation of Right Ventricular dP/dtmax and Intracardiac Impedance During Dobutamine Stress Test. Changes of the unipolar right ventricular impedance during the cardiac cycle are related to the changing content of blood (low impedance) and tissue (high impedance) around the tip of the pacing electrode. During myocardial contraction, the impedance continuously increases reaching its maximum in late systole. This impedance increase is thought to correlate with right ventricular contractility, and thus, with the inotropic state of the heart. In the new Inos2 DDDR pacemaker, integrated information from the changing ventricular impedance (VIMP) is used for closed-loop regulation of the rate response. The aim of this study was to analyze the effect of increasing dobutamine challenge on RV contractility and the measured impedance signals. In 12 patients (10 men, 68 ± 12 years) undergoing implantation of an Inos2 DDDR pacemaker (Biotronik), a right ventricular pigtail catheter was inserted for continuous measurements of RV-dP/dtmax and simultaneous VIMP signals during intrinsic and ventricular paced rhythm. Then, a stress test with a stepwise increase of intravenous dobutamine (5–20 μg/kg per min) was performed. To assess the relationship between RV contractility and measured sensor signals, normalized values of dP/dtmax and VIMP were compared by linear regression. There was a strong and highly significant correlation between dP/dtmax and VIMP for ventricular paced (r2= 0.93) and intrinsic rhythm (r2= 0.92), although the morphologies of the original impedance curves differed quite substantially between paced and intrinsic rhythm in the same patient. Furthermore, VIMP correlated well with sinus rate (r2= 0.82), although there were at least four patients with documented chronotropic incompetence. We conclude, that for intrinsic and ventricular paced rhythms sensor signals derived from right ventricular unipolar impedance curves closely correlate with dP/dtmax, and thus, with a surrogate of right ventricular contractility during dobutamine stress testing. Our results suggest that “inotropy-sensing” via measurement of intracardiac impedance is highly accurate and seems to be a promising sensor principle for physiological rate adaptation in a closed-loop pacing system.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Closed loop stimulation in prevention of vasovagal syncope. Inotropy controlled pacing in vasovagal syncope (INVASY): a multicentre randomized, single blind, controlled study

TL;DR: The study demonstrates the effectiveness of CLS pacing in preventing cardioinhibitory VVS and their quality of life greatly improved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cardiac pacing in severe recurrent reflex syncope and tilt-induced asystole.

TL;DR: The findings support the inclusion of tilt testing as a useful method to select candidates for cardiac pacing in patients affected by severe recurrent reflex syncope and tilt-induced asystole and dual-chamber pacemaker with CLS is highly effective in reducing the recurrences of syncope.
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Autonomous Systems in Anesthesia: Where Do We Stand in 2020? A Narrative Review

TL;DR: Robots in anesthesia offer not only the possibility to free the attending clinicians from repetitive tasks but can also reduce mental workload allowing them to focus on tasks that require human intelligence such as analytical and clinical approach, lifesaving decision-making capacity, and interpersonal interaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Combined use of micro computed tomography and histology to evaluate the regenerative capacity of bone grafting materials

TL;DR: The results indicate that the morphology of the bony structures depends on the selected bone grafting material and that an arbitrarily selected histological slice can lead to misleading conclusions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Intracardiac Impedance to Determine Sympathetic Activity in Rate Responsive Pacing

TL;DR: Measurement of mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) supports the physiological approach of adapting the pacing rate to various types of hemodynamic challenges and shows excellent agreement between spontaneous sinus rhythm and the ANS‐controlled stimulation rate during different forms of exercise.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of exercise performance of six rate-adaptive right ventricular cardiac pacemakers

TL;DR: It is concluded that the currently available rate-adaptive ventricular pacemakers improve exercise performance compared with VVIpacemakers in patients with bradycardias.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autonomic nervous system controlled closed loop cardiac pacing.

TL;DR: A multicenter clinical study is presented, which focuses on the reestablishment of closed loop cardiac control in patients with chronotropic insufficiency, using the information about sympathetic tone contained in the myocardial contractility to reconnect the heart rate to the physiological control mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of a rate adaptive pacemaker based on the maximum rate-of-rise of right ventricular pressure (RV dP/dtmax).

TL;DR: Initial data demonstrate that rate adaptive pacing based on RV dP/dtmax responds in a physiological manner and is of particular interest as it is based on a beat‐to‐beat parameter of cardiac mechanical function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interindividual comparison of different sensor principles for rate adaptive pacing.

TL;DR: None of the studied sensor‐controlled systems was able to determine an adequate pacing rate under all of the various load states, and CLS achieved a heart rate in agreement with those of the reference group in all physical and mental stress situations.
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