Does alternate and combined site pacing improve cardiac output in patients after cardiac surgery?
Acute multisite ventricular pacing after cardiac surgery reduces QRS duration but fails to improve cardiac output regardless of baseline ejection fraction.
We hypothesized that pacing at sites other than the right ventricular (RV) apex or at two or more ventricular sites would activate the myocardium more rapidly and improve cardiac function in patients undergoing coronary revascularization or aortic valve replacement. Epicardial electrodes were placed on the right atrium (A), RV paraseptal area close to the RV apex (B), RV outflow tract (C), LV apex (D), in patients undergoing bypass surgery. At constant rate and AV delay, we measured CO during A pacing, DVI pacing at B, C, D, and various combinations of sites in random order in ten patients with EF > 50% and 27 patients with EF < or = 50%. When pacing at two sites, we made one electrode a cathode and one an anode and noted two distinct thresholds by careful observation of the 12-lead ECG. There were no significant differences in CO, systemic vascular resistance, systolic, or mean arterial pressure. Significant differences were noted in QRS duration, which increased progressively going from AAI to 3-site, 2-site, and single site pacing (P < 0.05 each comparison). Thus: (1) QRS duration correlated inversely with the number of ventricular sites paced; (2) despite this, CO did not improve irrespective of baseline EF; (3) multisite pacing produced multiple distinct thresholds which appeared to be related to the number of sites paced, and (4) unique ECG patterns confirmed multisite pacing.
Buckingham et al. (Tue,) studied this question.