AUTOMATED PACEMAKER FUNCTION - 05/09/11
Résumé |
Automatic–self-acting under conditions fixed for it; having the power of action within it
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For decades, pacemakers have possessed automatic features, many of which are now taken for granted. Without automation, the pacemaker would be restricted to fixed rate asynchronous output. The earliest automated pacemaker function was the introduction of the inhibited output mode in the early 1960s.28 These early implementations of automation are now considered fundamental pacemaker functions, but in the late 1960s even the need for a noncompetitive pacing mode was hotly debated. Over the next two decades, further automation of pacemaker function gradually progressed to include features such as physiologic DDD pacing, pacemaker mediated tachycardia (PMT) intervention, rate adaptive pacing and mode switching. These early automated functions were largely confined to adjustments in the timing cycle of the devices. A brief chronology of the evolution of automated pacemaker operation is shown in Figure 1.
Within the past decade, virtually all aspects of pacemaker operation have been subjected to automated control.30, 48 These functions now include automatic capture and sensing control, self-adjusting rate response settings, sinus rhythm and atrioventricular (AV) conduction preference, and automated implant algorithms. A list of currently automated pacemaker functions is shown in Box 1.
Automated Pacemaker Functions
• | Capture verification/threshold tracking |
• | Sensing adjustment |
• | Rate responsive pacing |
• | Rate response optimization |
• | Mode switching |
• | Rate drop therapy |
• | Sinus preference |
• | AV delay hysteresis |
• | Rate responsive AV delay |
• | Lead impedance monitoring/polarity reprogramming |
• | PMT interventions |
• | Sleep lower rate limits |
• | Advanced diagnostics/electrogram storage |
• | Patient alerts |
The automation of pacemaker function is a rapidly growing trend in the pacing industry. Advanced automation has many potential benefits and has great appeal to clinicians. Critical evaluation of many new functions is lacking, however, and in most cases the actual clinical benefits of these advanced technologies have not been demonstrated. This article reviews the operation of newer automated pacemaker functions and describes their potential benefits and disadvantages.
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| Address reprint requests to Mark A. Wood, MD, Virginia Commonwealth University, Medical College of Virginia, 1200 East Broad Street, West Hospital, East Wing, Room 567, Richmond, VA 23219 |
Vol 18 - N° 1
P. 177-191 - février 2000 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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