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Optimizing atrio‐ventricular delay in pacemakers using potentially implantable physiological biomarkers

BACKGROUND: Hemodynamically optimal atrioventricular (AV) delay can be derived by echocardiography or beat‐by‐beat blood pressure (BP) measurements, but analysis is labor intensive. Laser Doppler perfusion monitoring measures blood flow and can be incorporated into future implantable cardiac devices...

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Autores principales: Keene, Daniel, Miyazawa, Alejandra A, Johal, Monika, Arnold, Ahran D, Ali, Nadine, Saqi, Khulat A, March, Katherine, Burden, Leah, Francis, Darrel P, Whinnett, Zachary I, Shun‐Shin, Matthew J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9305784/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34967945
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pace.14434
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author Keene, Daniel
Miyazawa, Alejandra A
Johal, Monika
Arnold, Ahran D
Ali, Nadine
Saqi, Khulat A
March, Katherine
Burden, Leah
Francis, Darrel P
Whinnett, Zachary I
Shun‐Shin, Matthew J
author_facet Keene, Daniel
Miyazawa, Alejandra A
Johal, Monika
Arnold, Ahran D
Ali, Nadine
Saqi, Khulat A
March, Katherine
Burden, Leah
Francis, Darrel P
Whinnett, Zachary I
Shun‐Shin, Matthew J
author_sort Keene, Daniel
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Hemodynamically optimal atrioventricular (AV) delay can be derived by echocardiography or beat‐by‐beat blood pressure (BP) measurements, but analysis is labor intensive. Laser Doppler perfusion monitoring measures blood flow and can be incorporated into future implantable cardiac devices. We assess whether laser Doppler can be used instead of BP to optimize AV delay. METHODS: Fifty eight patients underwent 94 AV delay optimizations with biventricular or His‐bundle pacing using laser Doppler and simultaneous noninvasive beat‐by‐beat BP. Optimal AV delay was defined using a curve of hemodynamic response to switching from AAI (reference state) to DDD (test state) at several AV delays (40–320 ms), with automatic quality control checking precision of the optimum. Five subsequent patients underwent an extended protocol to test the impact of greater numbers of alternations on optimization quality. RESULTS: 55/94 optimizations passed quality control resulting in an optimal AV delay on laser Doppler similar to that derived by BP (median absolute deviation 12 ms). An extended protocol with increasing number of replicates consistently improved quality and reduced disagreement between laser Doppler and BP optima. With only five replicates, no optimization passed quality control, and the median absolute deviation would be 29 ms. These improved progressively until at 50 replicates, all optimizations passed quality control and the median absolute deviation was only 13 ms. CONCLUSIONS: Laser Doppler perfusion produces hemodynamic optima equivalent to BP. Quality control can be automatic. Adding more replicates, consistently improves quality. Future implantable devices could use such methods to dynamically and reliably optimize AV delays.
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spelling pubmed-93057842022-07-28 Optimizing atrio‐ventricular delay in pacemakers using potentially implantable physiological biomarkers Keene, Daniel Miyazawa, Alejandra A Johal, Monika Arnold, Ahran D Ali, Nadine Saqi, Khulat A March, Katherine Burden, Leah Francis, Darrel P Whinnett, Zachary I Shun‐Shin, Matthew J Pacing Clin Electrophysiol Devices BACKGROUND: Hemodynamically optimal atrioventricular (AV) delay can be derived by echocardiography or beat‐by‐beat blood pressure (BP) measurements, but analysis is labor intensive. Laser Doppler perfusion monitoring measures blood flow and can be incorporated into future implantable cardiac devices. We assess whether laser Doppler can be used instead of BP to optimize AV delay. METHODS: Fifty eight patients underwent 94 AV delay optimizations with biventricular or His‐bundle pacing using laser Doppler and simultaneous noninvasive beat‐by‐beat BP. Optimal AV delay was defined using a curve of hemodynamic response to switching from AAI (reference state) to DDD (test state) at several AV delays (40–320 ms), with automatic quality control checking precision of the optimum. Five subsequent patients underwent an extended protocol to test the impact of greater numbers of alternations on optimization quality. RESULTS: 55/94 optimizations passed quality control resulting in an optimal AV delay on laser Doppler similar to that derived by BP (median absolute deviation 12 ms). An extended protocol with increasing number of replicates consistently improved quality and reduced disagreement between laser Doppler and BP optima. With only five replicates, no optimization passed quality control, and the median absolute deviation would be 29 ms. These improved progressively until at 50 replicates, all optimizations passed quality control and the median absolute deviation was only 13 ms. CONCLUSIONS: Laser Doppler perfusion produces hemodynamic optima equivalent to BP. Quality control can be automatic. Adding more replicates, consistently improves quality. Future implantable devices could use such methods to dynamically and reliably optimize AV delays. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-01-28 2022-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9305784/ /pubmed/34967945 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pace.14434 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Devices
Keene, Daniel
Miyazawa, Alejandra A
Johal, Monika
Arnold, Ahran D
Ali, Nadine
Saqi, Khulat A
March, Katherine
Burden, Leah
Francis, Darrel P
Whinnett, Zachary I
Shun‐Shin, Matthew J
Optimizing atrio‐ventricular delay in pacemakers using potentially implantable physiological biomarkers
title Optimizing atrio‐ventricular delay in pacemakers using potentially implantable physiological biomarkers
title_full Optimizing atrio‐ventricular delay in pacemakers using potentially implantable physiological biomarkers
title_fullStr Optimizing atrio‐ventricular delay in pacemakers using potentially implantable physiological biomarkers
title_full_unstemmed Optimizing atrio‐ventricular delay in pacemakers using potentially implantable physiological biomarkers
title_short Optimizing atrio‐ventricular delay in pacemakers using potentially implantable physiological biomarkers
title_sort optimizing atrio‐ventricular delay in pacemakers using potentially implantable physiological biomarkers
topic Devices
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9305784/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34967945
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pace.14434
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