Placement of prophylactic epicardial defibrillation patches at time of open-heart surgery in patients at risk for postoperative arrhythmias has been strongly questioned. Concern has centered on the ability to safely perform subsequent external defibrillation if needed. From 61 patients who were treated with a two-stage strategy we identified 17 who, while wearing epicardial patches and no generator, received external cardioversion/defibrillation for 20 episodes of hemodynamically unstable ventricular arrhythmias. All the patients had one small and one large patch. Eighteen of the episodes were induced during electrophysiological testing (with transthoracic shocks delivered via pad electrodes oriented in an apex-posterior configuration) and two were spontaneous. The episodes occurred at 21 +/- 27 days from patch implant. Thirteen episodes (65%) were converted with one shock at an energy level of 185 +/- 65 J. Seven (35%) required a second shock at 351 +/- 22 J. The accumulated energy requirement was 286 +/- 205 J. No adverse outcomes were noted. The number of episodes requiring more than one shock and the energy requirements were not different from those in a control group of 20 similar arrhythmias treated with the same equipment. Under these conditions, external cardioversion/defibrillation in patients with one large and one small epicardial defibrillation patch was uniformly successful. Further data is needed in the out-of-hospital setting and on the results of external defibrillation in patients with two large patches.
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Am J Case Rep
November 2020
Memorial Cardiac and Vascular Institute, Memorial Regional Hospital, Memorial HealthCare System, Hollywood, FL, USA.
BACKGROUND The energy delivered by a defibrillator is expressed in joules (J). However, current is what actually defibrillates the heart and is related to the voltage-to-impedance ratio. With the same energy, the lower the transthoracic impedance, the higher the current delivered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Innov Card Rhythm Manag
December 2017
NYU Winthrop Hospital, Mineola, NY, USA.
Active compression-decompression (ACD) cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) devices were conceived and invented by Drs. Todd Cohen and Keith Lurie to improve the low survival rates for conventional CPR. Active decompression creates greater chest recoil as compared with the passive decompression used in standard CPR, leading to increased preload and greater cardiac output.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Res Cardiol
March 2018
Department of Electrophysiology, University Hospital Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
Aims: A relevant number of patients presenting for electrical cardioversion carry a pacemaker (PM) or ICD. Case reports suggest a potential hazard of external cardioversion/defibrillation. The incidence of shock related device complications is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCirc Arrhythm Electrophysiol
April 2015
From the Arrhythmia Section, Cardiology Department, Thorax Institute, Hospital Clínic and IDIBAPS (Institut d'Investigació Agustí Pi i Sunyer), Barcelona, Spain.
Background: Ventricular tachycardia (VT) substrate ablation usually requires extensive ablation. Scar dechanneling technique may limit the extent of ablation needed.
Methods And Results: The study included 101 consecutive patients with left ventricular scar-related VT (75 ischemic patients; left ventricular ejection fraction, 36 ± 13%).
Am J Emerg Med
November 2014
Department of Cardiology, The First Affiliated Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University, Wenzhou 325100, China. Electronic address:
External direct current (DC) shocks are and have long been commonly used for electrical cardioversion/defibrillation of atrial or ventricular arrhythmias. ST-segment elevation after cardio version with DC is an easily ignored phenomenon, occurring acutely and resolving during the first few minutes postshock. Here, we describe electrocardiographic findings of widespread ST-segment elevation lasting at least 1 hour after DC cardioversion for ventricular defibrillation due to Brugada syndrome and mimicking acute myocardial infarction (AMI).
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