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P Wave Recognition and Atrial Stimulation with Fractally Iridium Coated VDD Single Pass Leads
Author(s) -
RES J.C.J.,
REIJSOO F.J.,
WOERSEM R.J.,
MIDDELHOFF C.J.F.M.,
KALMTHOUT P.M.,
ZWART P.,
WESTENDORP P.
Publication year - 1994
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.1540-8159.1994.tb03768.x
Subject(s) - medicine , cardiology , p wave , lead (geology) , telemetry , atrial fibrillation , electrophysiology , telecommunications , geomorphology , computer science , geology
The bottleneck of VDD systems is the reliable detection of the small atrial signals by a floating atrial electrode. Fractally iridium coated electrodes offer excellent sensing and pacing performance. In this study, the performance of such a floating atrial lead in P wave sensing and synchronous ventricular stimulation was examined. Atrial pacing was also used as a test of atrial wall contact. Patients and Methods : A fractally iridium coated VDDlead was implanted in 18 patients. In 15 patients it was interfaced with a VDD pacemaker and in 3 patients with a DDD system depending on the P wave amplitude measured acutely (≥ 2 mV). Simultaneous recordings of the surface ECG and pacemaker telemetry were used to analyze P wave amplitudes and AV synchrony in different body positions, and during normal and deep breathing. Additionally, exercise tests based on daily life activities and 24‐hour ECG monitoring were performed to test the pacemaker function. Results : During implantation P wave amplitudes were 1.86 mV ± 1.08 mV (range 0.5–4.9 mV) and during follow‐up (6.6 ± 5.6 weeks) 0.18–3.8 mV. Holter recordings revealed reliable P wave sensing at a sensitivity setting of 0.5 mV (95.5%). P wave sensing was further improved by a higher atrial sensitivity. AV synchronous pacing ± 99.9% was achieved in all patients. In 7 patients the atrial electrode could be positioned close to the atrial wall enabling atrial stimulation thresholds at an average of 4.3 volts. Conclusion : This fractally iridium coated VVD lead allowed consistent and reliable P wave sensing at an atrial sensitivity as low as 0.5 mV in selected patients.

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