Guided by a simple pathway model, interventricular asynchrony measurements accurately predicted optimal hemodynamic performance in individual CRT patients.
29 patients with congestive heart failure from the PATH-CHF-I study and 6 dogs with chronic LBBB undergoing pacing measurements.
Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) optimization using interventricular asynchrony (interVA) vs Various pacing modes (LV, RV, BiV) and AV delays
Prediction of individual interVA at peak improvement (interVA(p))
This study explores the use of interventricular asynchrony (interVA) for optimizing cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT), an idea emerging from a simple pathway model of conduction in the ventricles. Measurements were performed in six dogs with chronic left bundle branch block (LBBB) and in 29 patients of the Pacing Therapies for Congestive Heart Failure (PATH-CHF)-I study. In the dogs, intraventricular asynchrony (intraVA) was determined using left ventricular (LV) endocardial activation maps. In dogs and patients, the maximum rate of rise of LV pressure (LV dP/dt(max)) and the pulse pressure (PP) and interVA time delay between upslope of LV and right ventricular (RV) pressure curves were measured during LV, RV, and biventricular (BiV) pacing with various atrioventricular (AV) delays. Measurements in the canine hearts supported the pathway model in that optimal resynchronization occurred at approximately 50% reduction of intraVA and at an interVA value halfway that during LBBB and LV pacing. In patients with significant hemodynamic response during pacing (n = 22), intrinsic interVA and interVA at peak improvement (interVA(p)) varied widely between patients (from -83 to -15 ms and from -42 to +31 ms, respectively). However, the model predicted individual interVA(p) accurately (SD of +/-6 ms and +/-12 ms for LV dP/dt(max) and PP, respectively). At equal interVA, LV and BiV pacing produced equal hemodynamic response, but in 11 of 22 responders, BiV pacing reduced interVA insufficiently to reach the maximum hemodynamic response. LV pacing at short AV delay proved to result in better hemodynamics than predicted by the model, indicating that additional factors determine hemodynamics during LV preexcitation. Guided by a simple pathway model, interVA measurements accurately predict optimal hemodynamic performance in individual CRT patients.
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Xander Verbeek
Netherlands Comprehensive Cancer Organisation
Angelo Auricchio
Electrophysiology
Yinghong Yu
University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
AJP Heart and Circulatory Physiology
Maastricht University
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Verbeek et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Congestive Heart Failure (n=29). Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) optimization using interventricular asynchrony (interVA) vs. Various pacing modes (LV, RV, BiV) and AV delays was evaluated on Prediction of individual interVA at peak improvement (interVA(p)). Guided by a simple pathway model, interventricular asynchrony measurements accurately predicted optimal hemodynamic performance in individual CRT patients.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a200b79d40b4a263065bd89 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00641.2005
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