Pacemaker complication: Difference between revisions

(updated indications for pacemaker placement)
(new section- ECG changes with pacemaker)
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#Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy- Conduction delay (>150msec w/ mortality benefit) in chronic systolic heart failure further decreases EF, increases remodeling and increased MR.
#Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy- Conduction delay (>150msec w/ mortality benefit) in chronic systolic heart failure further decreases EF, increases remodeling and increased MR.
#Neurocardiogenic Syncope and Carotid Sinus Syndrome
#Neurocardiogenic Syncope and Carotid Sinus Syndrome
==Expected ECG Patterns==
#Absence of pacer artifact indicates intrinsic depolarization
#Pacing artifacts preceding depolarizations indicate successful pacing and capture
#Leads in RV apex produce LBBB pattern with appropriate discordance
#New RBBB pattern may indicate lead in LV
#Simulataneous depol of ventricles produces dominant R wave in V1


==Pacemaker Malfunction==
==Pacemaker Malfunction==

Revision as of 00:47, 6 September 2014

Nomenclature

  • Position I
    • Chamber paced (A, V, or D (dual))
  • Position II
    • Chamber sensed
  • Position III
    • Response after Sensing
      • I = inhibited
      • T = triggered
      • D = Dual
  • Position IV
    • Programmability
      • P = rate & output
      • M = multiprogramable
      • C = communicating
      • R = rate adaptive
      • O = none
  • Position V
    • Arrhythmia Control
      • P = pacing
      • S = shock
      • D = dual (P+S)
      • O = none

Indications

  1. Sinus Node Dysfunction-sinus bradycardia/arrest, sinoatrial block, chronotropic incompetence, a-fib.
  2. Acquired AV block- 3rd degree block and 2nd degree type II
  3. Chronic Bifascicular or Trifascicular block
  4. After Acute MI-high mortality with persistent AV block post MI
  5. Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy- Conduction delay (>150msec w/ mortality benefit) in chronic systolic heart failure further decreases EF, increases remodeling and increased MR.
  6. Neurocardiogenic Syncope and Carotid Sinus Syndrome


Expected ECG Patterns

  1. Absence of pacer artifact indicates intrinsic depolarization
  2. Pacing artifacts preceding depolarizations indicate successful pacing and capture
  3. Leads in RV apex produce LBBB pattern with appropriate discordance
  4. New RBBB pattern may indicate lead in LV
  5. Simulataneous depol of ventricles produces dominant R wave in V1

Pacemaker Malfunction

Problems with pocket

  1. Infection
    1. Most commonly Staphylococcus aureus or S. epidermidis
  2. Hematoma
    1. Typically occurs shortly after placement

Problems with leads

  1. Lead separation results in failure to capture
  2. Lead dislodgment may cause thrombosis or myocardial rupture
  3. Lead infection can cause severe sepsis

Failure to pace

  1. Causes include battery exhaustion, wire fracture, or electrode displacement
  2. Tissue reaction around electrode may make myocardium insensitive

Failure to sense

  1. Voltages of patient's intrinsic QRS complex is too low to be detected
  2. New intrinsic arrhythmia, AMI, electrolyte abnormalities, lead separation, battery depletion

Runaway Pacing

  1. Physiologic electrical activity (T waves, muscle potentials)
  2. External electromagnetic interference
  3. Signals generated by interaction of different portions of the pacing system

Work-Up

  1. CXR
  2. ECG
  3. Troponin
  4. Interrogation

Management

  • Use magnet to convert pacemaker to asynchronous mode if oversensing or runaway pacing