scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Hemodynamic effects of acute atrioventricular sequential pacing in patients with left ventricular dysfunction

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Cardiac index was higher during A-V sequential pacing than during ventricular pacing for every patient at paced rates of 75 to 100 beats/min and the increase in cardiac index in an individual patient did not correlate with baseline characteristics including functional class, cardiothoracic ratio, resting ejection fraction, cardiac index or balloon-occluded pulmonary wedge pressure.
Abstract
Acute atrioventricular (A-V) sequential pacing was compared with ventricular pacing in seven men with symptomatic left ventricular failure (New York Heart Association functional class III and IV) and depressed left ventricular ejection fraction (mean 29 percent, range 18 to 40). Cardiac index was higher during A-V sequential pacing than during ventricular pacing for every patient at paced rates of 75 to 100 beats/min. The mean increment was 17 percent (range 10 to 37) at a paced rate of 75 beats/ min, 23 percent (range 8 to 45) at a paced rate of 85 beats/min and 29 percent (range 19 to 55) at a paced rate of 100 beats/min. The increase in cardiac index in an individual patient did not correlate with baseline characteristics including functional class, cardiothoracic ratio, resting ejection fraction, cardiac index or balloon-occluded pulmonary wedge pressure. Arterial pressure varied from beat to beat during ventricular pacing because of the changing relation of atrial to ventricular systole. When an atrial contraction preceded a ventricular paced beat by a physiologic interval intraarterial pulse pressure uniformly increased. That increase correlated strongly (r = 0.993) with the increase in cardiac index that occurred during A-V sequential pacing. Measurement of the pulse pressure during A-V dissociation is a simple technique that may be useful for predicting the degree of improvement in cardiac output expected with methods of pacing that restore A-V synchrony.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of dual-chamber pacing with short atrioventricular delay in dilated cardiomyopathy.

TL;DR: DDD pacing with a short atrioventricular delay may have therapeutic potential in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, even in the absence of conventional indications for pacemaker implantation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Usefulness of physiologic dual-chamber pacing in drug-resistant idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy.

TL;DR: DDD pacing could represent an alternative approach to the management of chronic heart failure due to dilated cardiomyopathy, especially for heart transplant candidates and patients who are not accepted for cardiac transplantation, but no longer respond to drug therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dual-chamber pacing with a short atrioventricular delay in congestive heart failure: a randomized study.

TL;DR: Dual-chamber pacing with a short AV delay does not improve hemodynamic and clinical status or ejection fraction measured on the day after pacemaker implantation in patients with chronic congestive heart failure, and routine use of pacemaker therapy with a long AV delay is unwarranted.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Pacemaker Syndrome

TL;DR: The evolution of a clinically recognized syndrome, an analysis of possible mechanisms and clinical manifestations, and diagnostic approaches and their implications for management are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improvement of cardiac function in patients with severe congestive heart failure and coronary artery disease by dual chamber pacing with shortened AV delay.

TL;DR: Pacemaker therapy in severe heart failure refractory to medical therapy can be of considerable benefit in patients whose quality‐of‐life is severely compromised when pharmacological therapy is no longer effective.
References
More filters
Book

Nomenclature and criteria for diagnosis of diseases of the heart and great vessels

Martin Dolgin
TL;DR: This edition restores the functional capacity component of the classification (dropped from the past two editions) and introduces an objective assessment category.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermodilution cardiac output determination with a single flow-directed catheter.

TL;DR: A single right heart catheter which allows simultaneous determinations of cardiac output, pulmonary artery pressure, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, and right atrial pressure in critically ill patients is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies on Starling's Law of the Heart

TL;DR: Evidence was presented that in intact human subjects the characteristics of left atrial and left ventricular contraction are functions of the pressures in these chambers prior to the onset of their contraction, thus lending further support to the concept that Starling9s law is operative in the human heart.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of left ventricular filling pressure on atrial contribution to cardiac output

TL;DR: Atrial contribution tends to be less effective in augmenting cardiac output when filling pressure is already elevated, particularly in patients with impaired left ventricular function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Left atrial transport function in myocardial infarction. Importance of its booster pump function.

TL;DR: In patients with myocardial infarction, atrial contraction made a large contribution to left ventricular filling and stroke volume irrespective of the type ofleft ventricular functional derangement that was present.
Related Papers (5)