In 19 patients paced and medicated for bradycardia tachycardia syndrome (BTS), AAIR and DDDR pacing were compared with regard to quality of life (QoL), atrial tachyarrhythmia (AFib), exercise tolerance, and left ventricular (LV)function. Patients had a PQ interval < or = 240 ms during sinus rhythm, no second or third degree AV block, no bundle branch block, or bifascicular block. In DDDR mode, AV delay was optimized using the aortic time velocity integral. After 3 months, QoL was assessed by questionnaires, patients were investigated by 24-hour Holter, cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPX) was performed, and LV function was determined by echocardiography. QoL was similar in all dimensions, except dizziness, showing a significantly lower prevalence in AAIR mode. The incidence of AFib was 12 episodes in 2 patients with AAIR versus 22 episodes in 7 patients with DDDR pacing (P = 0.072). In AAIR mode, 164 events of second and third degree AV block were detected in 7 patients (37%) with pauses between 1 and 4 seconds. During CPX, exercise duration and work load were higher in AAIR than in DDDR mode (423+/-127 vs 402+/-102 s and 103+/-31 vs 96+/-27 Watt, P < 0.05). Oxygen consumption (VO2), was similar in both modes. During echocardiography, only deceleration of early diastolic flow velocity and early diastolic closure rate of the anterior mitral valve leaflet were higher in DDD than in AAI pacing (5.16+/-1.35 vs 3.56+/-0.95 m/s2 and 69.2+/-23 vs 54.1+/-26 mm/s, P < 0.05). As preferred pacing mode, 11 patients chose DDDR, 8 patients chose AAIR. Hence, AAIR and DDDR pacing seem to be equally effective in BTS patients. In view of a considerable rate of high degree AV block during AAIR pacing, DDDR mode should be preferred for safety reasons.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1460-9592.2001.01585.xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

dddr pacing
16
aair dddr
12
degree block
12
dddr mode
12
aair
9
patients
9
aair versus
8
dddr
8
bradycardia tachycardia
8
tachycardia syndrome
8

Similar Publications

Background: Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) is a cornerstone treatment for heart failure, yet the optimal pacing mode remains uncertain. This study investigates the impact of DDDR (rate-adaptive atrial support) versus VDD pacing modes on functional capacity and echocardiographic outcomes in patients with CRT-defibrillators.

Methods: In a multicenter, double-blind, crossover trial, 26 sinus rhythm patients undergoing CRT-defibrillator implantation were randomized to DDDR at 60 beats-per-minute or VDD at 30 beats-per-minute.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Triple pacing spikes on QRST: What is the mechanism?

J Electrocardiol

December 2024

Department of Cardiology, Electrophysiology division, Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala 695011, India. Electronic address:

A septuagenarian man underwent dual chamber pacemaker (DDDR - Boston Scientific Massachusetts, U.S.) insertion for a complete heart block.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Permanent pacemaker implantation has the potential to impact left ventricular (LV) function and hence quality of life (QoL) in the long term.

Aim: To assess the effect of single- and dual-chamber pacing on LV function and QoL.

Methods: This study included 56 patients who underwent permanent pacing: Dual pacing, dual sensing, dual responsive and rate responsive (DDDR) for the initial 3 months and ventricular pacing, ventricular sensing, inhibited response and rate responsive (VVIR) for the next 3 months, and DDDR mode for the last 3 months.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * This system uses two leadless devices that communicate with each other instead of traditional wires, which makes it unique in its design.
  • * The paper provides an overview of the dual-chamber pacemaker implantation process, highlighting important steps to ensure safe and efficient procedures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Subclinical atrial fibrillation (AF) increases risks of developing clinical AF, stroke, and cardiovascular death; researchers aimed to test if closed loop stimulation (CLS) could reduce atrial high-rate episodes (AHREs) in pacemaker patients compared to conventional dual-chamber rate-adaptive pacing (DDDR).
  • A study with 1,210 patients showed that those using CLS had a lower incidence of the primary endpoint (first AHRE lasting ≥6 min, stroke, or TIA) compared to DDDR over a 3-year period, particularly effective in patients without atrioventricular block or AF history.
  • The findings suggest that dual-chamber CLS significantly reduces AHRE occurrence, highlighting its potential benefits for patients
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!