| Literature DB >> 23821492 |
M M D Molenaar1, B Oude Velthuis, M F Scholten, J Y Stevenhagen, W A Wesselink, J M van Opstal.
Abstract
AIMS: Although cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) is an established treatment to improve cardiac function, a significant amount of patients do not experience noticeable improvement in their cardiac function. Optimal timing of the delay between atrial and ventricular pacing pulses (AV delay) is of major importance for effective CRT treatment and this optimum may differ between resting and exercise conditions. In this study the feasibility of haemodynamic measurements by the non-invasive finger plethysmographic method (Nexfin) was used to optimise the AV delay during exercise. METHODS ANDEntities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23821492 PMCID: PMC3776071 DOI: 10.1007/s12471-013-0438-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neth Heart J ISSN: 1568-5888 Impact factor: 2.380
Inclusion criteria
| - Intact AV conduction. |
| - Patients age <80 years |
| - CRT implanted on indication of LBBB and according to ESC guidelines |
| - Able to complete a supine bicycle exercise stress protocol |
| - Sinus rhythm, no patients with e.g. permanent atrial fibrillation can be included |
| - No prior valvular surgery. |
| (might alter the physiology of the heart cycle) |
| - CRT in situ for minimally 6 months. |
| (after 6 months the major part of remodelling is assumed to be completed) |
| - No history of irreversible ischaemia in the heart; no previous myocardial infarction or ischaemia present |
| (irreversible ischaemia might have a major influence on heart cycle physiology and the response to CRT) |
| - Posterolateral placement of the left ventricular electrode |
CRT = cardiac resynchronisation therapy, ESC = European Society of Cardiology, LBBB = left bundle branch block
Patient characteristics
| Sex | Male | 25 patients |
| Female | 6 patients | |
| Age | 65.8 ± 8.9 year | |
| CRT device | CRT-P | 0 patients |
| CRT-D | 31 patients | |
| Device brand | Medtronic | 13 patients |
| St Jude Medical | 14 patients | |
| Boston/Guidant | 4 patients | |
| EF before implant | 26 ± 7 % | |
| Time after implant | 32.9 ± 14.5 months | |
| Ventricular pacing | 98 ± 2 % | |
| Max stage reached | Stage 1 | 10 patients |
| Stage 2 | 14 patients | |
| Stage 3 | 7 patients |
CRT = cardiac resynchronisation therapy, EF = ejection fraction
Fig. 1Optimal AV delay calculation for one stage in one patient. The points mark the ΔSV calculations for the different AV delays. The solid curve is the individual optimisation curve created by the LSE method. The optimal AV delay is selected as the maximum of the optimisation curve (dotted line)
Percentage of eligible stages and mean optimal atrioventricular (AV) delay per stage
| Optimal AV delay | % with max | Mean ± SD |
|---|---|---|
| Rest | 61 % | 118 ± 31 ms |
| Stage 1 | 65 % | 121 ± 40 ms |
| Stage 2 | 57 % | 129 ± 29 ms |
| Stage 3 | 57 % | 109 ± 31 ms |
| Overall | 60 % | 120 ± 34 ms |
Fig. 2Increase in SV created by optimisation