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Short‐Term and Long‐Term Changes of Left Ventricular Volumes During Rate‐Adaptive and Single‐Rate Pacing
Author(s) -
SEDNEY MEREDITH I.,
WEIJERS ERIC,
WALL ERNST E.,
ADIPRANOTO JEEEREY D.,
CAMPS JAN,
BLOKLAND JACOBUS A.K.,
PAUWELS ERNEST K.J.,
SCHIPPERHEIJN JOHANNES J.,
BUIS BEERT,
BRUSCHKE ALBERT V.G.
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
pacing and clinical electrophysiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.686
H-Index - 101
eISSN - 1540-8159
pISSN - 0147-8389
DOI - 10.1111/j.1540-8159.1989.tb01877.x
Subject(s) - medicine , cardiology , radionuclide angiography , contractility , heart rate , ejection fraction , ventricular pacing , ventricular function , diastole , atrioventricular block , heart failure , blood pressure
SEDNEY, M.L, et al .: Short‐Term and Long‐Term Changes of Left Ventricular Volumes During Rate‐Adaptive and Single‐Rate Pacing To evaluate the adaptation of the heart to exercise during pacing, 15 patients with permanent endocardial pacemakers were studied; nine patients had atrioventricular universal (DDD) pacemakers (Symbios 7005) and six patients had activity detecting rate‐responsive ventricular (WIR) pacemakers (Activitrax 8403). Left ventricular function in each patient during rate variable pacing was compared to ventricular function during VVI single‐rate pacing. End‐systolic and end‐diastolic volume changes during exercise were measured by radionuclide angiography and the amount of volume change was used to assess left ventricular function. Both short‐term (within 4 hours) and long‐term measurements (after at least 4 weeks) were made at rest and at 50% of the maximal exercise capacity in DDD or VVIR mode and were compared with VVI single‐rate pacing. All patients, when changed from DDD or VVIR mode to VVI single‐rate pacing showed a significant increase of the end‐diastolic volume during exercise, which increased even more after long‐term VVI pacing. During long‐term rate variable pacing, there was no increase of the end‐diastolic volume during exercise. DDD or VVIR pacing initially showed a substantial increase of the end‐systolic volume during exercise combined with a decrease of left ventricular ejection fraction, suggesting a decrease of the left ventricular contractility. After 4 weeks, contractility improved both with DDD and VVIR pacing. We conclude that short‐term DDD and VVIR pacing induces a temporary impairment of left ventricular function that improves after 4 weeks, whereas long‐term VVI pacing is associated with left ventricular dilatation even at moderate levels of exercise.