Literature DB >> 11823088

Doppler myocardial imaging to evaluate the effectiveness of pacing sites in patients receiving biventricular pacing.

Gerardo Ansalone1, Paride Giannantoni, Renato Ricci, Paolo Trambaiolo, Francesco Fedele, Massimo Santini.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The goal of this study was to compare the efficacy of biventricular pacing (BIV) at the most delayed wall of the left ventricle (LV) and at other LV walls.
BACKGROUND: Biventricular pacing could provide additional benefit when it is applied at the most delayed site.
METHODS: In 31 patients with advanced nonischemic heart failure, the activation delay was defined, in blind before BIV, by regional noninvasive Tissue Doppler Imaging as the time interval between the end of the A-wave (C point) and the beginning of the E-wave (O point) from the basal level of each wall. The left pacing site was considered concordant with the most delayed site when the lead was inserted at the wall with the greatest regional interval between C and O points (CO(R)). After BIV, patients were divided into group A (13/31) (i.e., paced at the most delayed site) and group B (18/31) (i.e., paced at any other site).
RESULTS: After BIV, in all patients LV end-diastolic (LVEDV) and end-systolic (LVESV) volumes decreased (p = 0.025 and 0.001), LV ejection fraction (LVEF) increased (p = 0.002), QRS narrowed (p = 0.000), New York Heart Association class decreased (p = 0.006), 6-min walked distance (WD) increased (p = 0.046), the interval between closure and opening of mitral valve (CO) and isovolumic contraction time (ICT) decreased (p = 0.001 and 0.000), diastolic time (EA) and Q-P(2) interval increased (p = 0.003 and 0.000), while Q-A(2) interval and mean performance index (MPI) did not change. Group A showed greater improvement over group B in LVESV (p = 0.04), LVEF (p = 0.04), bicycle stress testing work (p = 0.03) and time (p = 0.08) capacity, CO (p = 0.04) and ICT (p = 0.02).
CONCLUSIONS: After BIV, LV performance improved significantly in all patients; however, the greatest improvement was found in patients paced at the most delayed site.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 11823088     DOI: 10.1016/s0735-1097(01)01772-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol        ISSN: 0735-1097            Impact factor:   24.094


  79 in total

1.  Triple-site pacing in patients with biventricular device-incidence of the phenomenon and cardiac resynchronization benefit.

Authors:  Alan Bulava; Gerardo Ansalone; Renato Ricci; Paride Giannantoni; Carlo Pignalberi; Petr Heinc; Jan Lukl; Massimo Santini
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2.  Early and late QRS morphology and width in biventricular pacing: relationship to lead site and electrical remodeling.

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