Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jan 2024)

Long-Term Atrioventricular Block Following Valve Surgery: Electrocardiographic and Surgical Predictors

  • Jacopo Farina,
  • Mauro Biffi,
  • Gianluca Folesani,
  • Luca Di Marco,
  • Sofia Martin,
  • Corrado Zenesini,
  • Carlo Savini,
  • Matteo Ziacchi,
  • Igor Diemberger,
  • Cristian Martignani,
  • Davide Pacini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13020538
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
p. 538

Abstract

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Background: Bradyarrhythmia requiring pacemaker implantation among patients undergoing valve surgery may occur even after several years, with unclear predictors. Our aim was to investigate the incidence of pacemaker implantation at different follow-up times and identify associated predictors. Methods: We conducted a retrospective study evaluating 1046 consecutive patients who underwent valve surgery at the Cardiac Surgery Division of Bologna University Hospital from 2005 to 2010. Results: During 10 ± 4 years of follow-up, 11.4% of these patients required pacemaker implantation. Interventions on both atrioventricular valves independently predicted long-term pacemaker implantation (SHR 2.1, 95% CI 1.2–3.8, p = 0.014). Preoperative atrioventricular conduction disease strongly predicted long-term atrioventricular block, with right bundle branch block as the major predictor (SHR 7.0, 95% CI 3.9–12.4, p p p < 0.001). Conclusion: Patients undergoing valvular surgery have a continuing risk of atrioventricular block late after surgery until the 12-month follow-up, which was clearly superior to the rate of atrioventricular block observed at long-term. Pre-operative atrioventricular conduction disease and combined surgery on both atrioventricular valves are strong predictors of atrioventricular block requiring pacemaker implantation.

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