Advances in Medicine (Jan 2014)

Hemodynamic Surveillance of Ventricular Pacing Effectiveness with the Transvalvular Impedance Sensor

  • Valeria Calvi,
  • Giovanni Pizzimenti,
  • Marco Lisi,
  • Giuseppe Doria,
  • Ludovico Vasquez,
  • Francesco Lisi,
  • Salvatore Felis,
  • Donatella Tempio,
  • Alfredo Virgilio,
  • Alberto Barbetta,
  • Franco Di Gregorio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/307168
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2014

Abstract

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The Transvalvular Impedance (TVI) is derived between atrial and ventricular pacing electrodes. A sharp TVI increase in systole is an ejection marker, allowing the hemodynamic surveillance of ventricular stimulation effectiveness in pacemaker patients. At routine follow-up checks, the ventricular threshold test was managed by the stimulator with the supervision of a physician, who monitored the surface ECG. When the energy scan resulted in capture loss, the TVI system must detect the failure and increase the output voltage. A TVI signal suitable to this purpose was present in 85% of the tested patients. A total of 230 capture failures, induced in 115 patients in both supine and sitting upright positions, were all promptly recognized by real-time TVI analysis (100% sensitivity). The procedure was never interrupted by the physician, as the automatic energy regulation ensured full patient’s safety. The pulse energy was then set at 4 times the threshold to test the alarm specificity during daily activity (sitting, standing up, and walking). The median prevalence of false alarms was 0.336%. The study shows that TVI-based ejection assessment is a valuable approach to the verification of pacing reliability and the autoregulation of ventricular stimulation energy.