No single surface ECG criterion, including a negative QRS complex in lead I (29.0% vs 9.7%, P=0.2), could reliably distinguish mid-septal from anterior wall pacing sites.
Observational (n=31)
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 29% vs 9.7%
valor p: p=0.2
AIMS: When targeting the interventricular septum during pacemaker implantation, the lead may inadvertently be positioned on the anterior wall due to imprecise fluoroscopic landmarks. Surface electrocardiogram (ECG) criteria of the paced QRS complex (e.g. negativity in lead I) have been proposed to confirm a septal position, but these criteria have not been properly validated. Our aim was to investigate whether the paced QRS complex may be used to confirm septal lead position. METHODS: Anatomical reconstruction of the right ventricle was performed using a NavX® system in 31 patients (70 ± 11 years, 26 males) to validate pacing sites. Surface 12-lead ECGs were analysed by digital callipers and compared while pacing from a para-Hissian position, from the mid-septum, and from the anterior free wall. RESULTS: Duration of the QRS complex was not significantly shorter when pacing from the mid-septum compared with the other sites. QRS axis was significantly less vertical during mid-septal pacing (18 ± 51°) compared with para-Hissian (38 ± 37°, P = 0.028) and anterior (53 ± 55°, P = 0.003) pacing, and QRS transition was intermediate (4.8 ± 1.3 vs. 3.8 ± 1.3, P < 0.001, and vs. 5.4 ± 0.9, P = 0.045, respectively), although no cut-offs could reliably distinguish sites. A negative QRS or the presence of a q-wave in lead I tended to be more frequent with anterior than with mid-septal pacing (9/31 vs. 3/31, P = 0.2 and 8/31 vs. 1/31, P = 1.0, respectively). CONCLUSION: No single ECG criterion could reliably distinguish pacing the mid-septum from the anterior wall. In particular, a negative QRS complex in lead I is an inaccurate criterion for validating septal pacing.
Burri et al. (Thu,) conducted a observational in Pacemaker implantation targeting the interventricular septum (n=31). Surface 12-lead ECG vs. Electroanatomical mapping (NavX system) was evaluated on Negative QRS in lead I (anterior vs. mid-septal pacing) (p=0.2). No single surface ECG criterion, including a negative QRS complex in lead I (29.0% vs 9.7%, P=0.2), could reliably distinguish mid-septal from anterior wall pacing sites.
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