| Literature DB >> 25372916 |
Andrés Di Leoni Ferrari1, Anibal Pires Borges1, Luciano Cabral Albuquerque1, Carolina Pelzer Sussenbach1, Priscila Raupp da Rosa1, Ricardo Medeiros Piantá1, Mario Wiehe1, Marco Antônio Goldani1.
Abstract
Implantable cardiac pacing systems are a safe and effective treatment for symptomatic irreversible bradycardia. Under the proper indications, cardiac pacing might bring significant clinical benefit. Evidences from literature state that the action of the artificial pacing system, mainly when the ventricular lead is located at the apex of the right ventricle, produces negative effects to cardiac structure (remodeling, dilatation) and function (dissinchrony). Patients with previously compromised left ventricular function would benefit the least with conventional right ventricle apical pacing, and are exposed to the risk of developing higher incidence of morbidity and mortality for heart failure. However, after almost 6 decades of cardiac pacing, just a reduced portion of patients in general would develop these alterations. In this context, there are not completely clear some issues related to cardiac pacing and the development of this cardiomyopathy. Causality relationships among QRS widening with a left bundle branch block morphology, contractility alterations within the left ventricle, and certain substrates or clinical (previous systolic dysfunction, structural heart disease, time from implant) or electrical conditions (QRS duration, percentage of ventricular stimulation) are still subjects of debate. This review analyses contemporary data regarding this new entity, and discusses alternatives of how to use cardiac pacing in this context, emphasizing cardiac resynchronization therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25372916 PMCID: PMC4412332 DOI: 10.5935/1678-9741.20140104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Bras Cir Cardiovasc
Acute and chronic effects associated with conventional right ventricle apical pacing.
| Myocardial netabolism/perfusion | Variations in regional blood flow |
| Variations in regional demand for oxygen | |
| Remodeling | Asymmetric myocardial hypertrophy |
| Histopathological changes (ion channels) | |
| Ventricular dilation | |
| Hemodynamics | Reduction of cardiac output |
| Increased filling pressures | |
| Electrical | Slowing of intrinsic electrical activation |
| Artificial left bundle branch block | |
| Mechanical | Changes of regional contraction (strain) |
| Mechanical interventricular dyssynchrony | |
| Mechanical interventricular dyssynchrony | |
| Functional mitral regugitation |
Studies on the stimulation of the right ventricle associated with outcomes.
| Author | Type of study | Operation Mode | Follow-up | Patients in study | n | LVEF | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albertsen (2008) | RCT | DDDxAAI | 1 Year | SND | 50 | >60% | Reduction of LVEF in group DDD |
| Pastore (2008) | Cohort | DDD | 1 Year | Subgroups according to LVEF | 153 | Sub-groups | Apical RV pacing induces LV dyssynchrony depending on basal LVEF |
| Nahlawi (2004) | Cohort | DDD | 1 Week | Preserved LVEF | 12 | Mean 66.5% | RV pacing results in worsening of LVEF |
| Vernooy (2006) | Cohort | DDD | Mean 7 years | Ablation of the His bundle | 45 | - | Prolonged RV pacing induces ventricular remodeling and reduction of LVEF |
| Schmidt (2007) | RCT | DDDxAAI | - | Subgroups according to LVEF | 33 | >35% or <35% | RV pacing prolongs QRS independent of LVEF. Dyssynchrony related with LVEF <35% |
| Tops (2007) | Cohort | - | 6 Months | Ablation of the His bundle | 58 | - | 57% of those with RV pacing presented LV dyssynchrony, reduction of LVEF and worsening of functional class |
| Andersen (1997) | RCT | AAIxVVI | 8 Years | SND | 225 | - | AAI mode with improvement in survival (RRR 34%), lower incidence of AF (RRR 46%) and thromboembolic events(RRR53%) |
| Nielsen (2003) | RCT | AAIRxDDDR-1 and DDDR-S | 3 Years | SND | 177 | - | AAI mode with lower incidence of AF (7.4% x 17.5% in DDDR-1 MODE X 23.3% in DDDR-s mode) |
| Lamas (2002) | RCT | VVIRxDDDR | 33 Months | SND | 2010 | - | DDDR Mode with lower incidence of AF (HR 0.79) and reduction of HF symptoms, with no difference in mortality dueto CVA |
| Wilkoff (2002) | RCT | VVIxDDDR | 18 Months | Indication of ICD | 506 | - | VVI mode with more hospitalization for HF, anddeath (HR 1.61) |
| Olshansky (2007) | RCT | VVIxDDD hysteresis | 1 Year | Indication ofICD | - | DDD Mode with less events(RRR 33%) | |
| Tops (2006) | Cohort | VDD | 1 Year | AV and ablation od the AV node | 55 | Mean 46% | 49% developed dyssynchrony of the LV |
RCT=randomized clinical trial; SND=sinus node disease; LVEF=left ventricular ejection fraction; RV=right ventricle; LV=left ventricle; RRR=relative risk reduction; AF=atrial fibrillation; HF=heart failure; CVA=cerebral vascular accident-stroke; ICD=implantable cardioverter defibrillator
ESC Guidelines - Recommendations for cardiac resynchronizatin therapy directly or upgrade from a conventional pacing system in patients with heart failure and formal indication for cardiac pacing therapy.
| Recommendation | Class | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Upgrade of conventional PM or ICD CRT is indicated in HF patients with | I | B |
| LVEF <35% and a demand for high percentage of ventricular pacing who persist in the NYHA functional class | ||
| III or IV even with optimized medical treatment | ||
| 2. CRT in a direct way CRT should be considered in patientis with HF, depressed LVEF and a demand for high percentage of ventricular pacing under risk of worsening od HF symptoms | IIa | B |
PM=pacemaker; ICD=mplantable cardioverter defibrillator; CRT=cardiac resynchronization therapy; HF=heart failure; LVEF=left ventricular ejection graction; NYHA=New York Heart Association. Brignole M, Auricchio A, Baron-Esquivias G, Bordachar P, Boriani G, Breithardt OA, et al.[
Fig. 1Meta-analysis of atrial-based pacing vs. ventricular pacing.
Fig. 2Proposed flowchart on how to avoid unnecessary right ventricular pacing in patients with indication for conventional pacemakers and without indication for cardiac resynchronization therapy.
| Abreviations, acronyms & symbols | |
|---|---|
| %CVP | Percentual ventricular pacing |
| AAI | Atrial detection and stimulation |
| ACP | Artificial cardiac pacing |
| AF | Atrial fibrillation |
| AV | Atrioventricular |
| AVB | Atrioventricular block |
| HF | Heart failure |
| HR | Heart rate |
| iAV | Atrioventricular interval |
| ICD | Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators |
| LBBB | Left Bundle Branch Block |
| PPM | Permanent pacemaker |
| RMit | Mitral regurgitation |
| SND | Sinus node dysfunctions |
| VVI | Ventricular detection and pacing |
| Authors’ roles & responsibilities | |
|---|---|
| ADLF | Analysis and/or interpretation of data, Final approval of the manuscript |
| Conception and design of the study, Implementation of the operations and/or experiments, Drafting of the manuscript or critical review of its contents | |
| APB | Analysis and/or interpretation of data, Final approval of the manuscript |
| Conception and design of the study, Implementation of the operations and/or experiments, Drafting of the manuscript or critical review of its contents | |
| LCA | Final approval of the manuscript, Drafting of the manuscript or critical review of its contents |
| CPS | Analysis and/or interpretation of data, Implementation of the operations and/or experiments |
| PRR | Analysis and/or interpretation of data, Implementation of the operations and/or experiments |
| RMP | Analysis and/or interpretation of data, Drafting of the manuscript or critical review of its contents |
| MW | Final approval of the manuscript, Drafting of the manuscript or critical review of its contents |
| MAG | Implementation of the operations and/or experiments, Drafting of the manuscript or critical review of its contents |