1. Far-field R wave oversensing in dual-chamber pacemakers designed for atrial arrhythmia management: effect of pacing site and lead tip to ring distance
- Author
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Luigi Padeletti, Giuseppe Inama, Michele Massimo Gulizia, Massimo Santini, Giuseppe Boriani, Andrea Grammatico, Fabio Ferri, Alessandro Capucci, Rossana Raneri, Paolo Rizzon, Renato Pietro Ricci, Francesco Miraglia, Gianluca Botto, G.Inama, M.Santini, L.Padeletti, G.Boriani, G.Botto, A.Capucci, M.Gulizia, R.Riccci, P.Rizzon, F.Ferri, F.Miraglia, R.Raneri, and A.Grammatico
- Subjects
Tachycardia ,Male ,Tachycardia, Ectopic Atrial ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pacemaker, Artificial ,Lower risk ,QRS complex ,Electrocardiography ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Lead (electronics) ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Equipment Design ,Equipment Failure ,Female ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Surgery ,Pacemaker ,Ectopic Atrial ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Artificial ,Cardiology ,Right atrium ,Implant ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
INAMA, G., et al.: Far-Field R Wave Oversensing in Dual Chamber Pacemakers Designed for Atrial Arrhythmia Management: Effect of Pacing Site and Lead Tip to Ring Distance. The aim of the study was to determine the incidence and practical implications of far-field R wave oversensing (FFRWO) and its association with pacing site and lead tip to ring spacing (TTRS) in implantable devices designed to diagnose and treat atrial tachyarrhythmias and programmed with a fixed and short postventricular blanking period. The study included 395 patients who were implanted with a DDDRP pacemaker and prospectively followed. At implant and follow-up visits FFRWO was assessed by analyzing lead electrical measures and atrial tachyarrhythmic episodes collected in the device diagnostics. During a median follow-up of 12 months 11 (2.8%) of 395 patients showed a clinically significant FFRWO that induced inappropriate detection or pacemaker malfunctioning. The atrial pacing site of these 11 patients was right atrium appendage (RAA) for 3 patients, representing 1.1% of 254 RAA patients, coronary sinus ostium (CSO) for 7 patients, representing 7.4% of 94 CSO patients (P0.005 vs RAA), and lateral wall (LW) for 1 (2.9%) of 34 LW patients. The minimal value of the FFRWO to P wave ratio, measured at implant, associated with a clinically significant FFRWO was 0.6; therefore, a value of 0.5 was used as a cutoff to identify patients at risk of undesirable device behavior induced by FFRWO: there were 11 (9.6%) of 114 of RAA patients with short (or = 10 mm) TTRS, 22 (18.8%) of 117 of RAA patients with long (or = 17 mm) TTRS (P0.05 vs short TTRS), 21 (30.6%) of 64 of CSO patients short TTRS (P0.001 vs RAA patients with short TTRS) and 3 (30%) of 10 of CSO patients with long TTRS. The analysis showed that, despite the short postventricular blanking time, FFRWO inducing undesired functioning in AT500 pacemakers is infrequent (2.8% of patients). Compared to RAA, the CSO lead position was more frequently associated with FFRWO.TTRS10 mm was associated with lower risk of clinically significant FFRWO in RAA. (PACE 2004; 27:1221-1230).
- Published
- 2004