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Far‐Field R Wave Oversensing in Dual Chamber Pacemakers Designed for Atrial Arrhythmia Management:
Author(s) -
INAMA GIUSEPPE,
SANTINI MASSIMO,
PADELETTI LUIGI,
BORIANI GIUSEPPE,
BOTTO GIANLUCA,
CAPUCCI ALESSANDRO,
GULIZIA MICHELE,
RICCI RENATO,
RIZZON PAOLO,
FERRI FABIO,
MIRAGLIA FRANCESCO,
RANERI ROSSANA,
GRAMMATICO ANDREA
Publication year - 2004
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.1540-8159.2004.00613.x
Subject(s) - medicine , cardiology , p wave , dual (grammatical number) , single chamber , atrial fibrillation , art , literature
The aim of the study was to determine the incidence and practical implications of far‐field R wave oversensing (FFRWO) and its association with pacing site and lead tip to ring spacing (TTRS) in implantable devices designed to diagnose and treat atrial tachyarrhythmias and programmed with a fixed and short postventricular blanking period. The study included 395 patients who were implanted with a DDDRP pacemaker and prospectively followed. At implant and follow‐up visits FFRWO was assessed by analyzing lead electrical measures and atrial tachyarrhythmic episodes collected in the device diagnostics. During a median follow‐up of 12 months 11 (2.8%) of 395 patients showed a clinically significant FFRWO that induced inappropriate detection or pacemaker malfunctioning. The atrial pacing site of these 11 patients was right atrium appendage (RAA) for 3 patients, representing 1.1% of 254 RAA patients, coronary sinus ostium (CSO) for 7 patients, representing 7.4% of 94 CSO patients (P < 0.005 vs RAA), and lateral wall (LW) for 1 (2.9%) of 34 LW patients. The minimal value of the FFRWO to P wave ratio, measured at implant, associated with a clinically significant FFRWO was 0.6; therefore, a value of 0.5 was used as a cutoff to identify patients at risk of undesirable device behavior induced by FFRWO: there were 11 (9.6%) of 114 of RAA patients with short (≤ 10 mm) TTRS, 22 (18.8%) of 117 of RAA patients with long (≥ 17 mm) TTRS (P < 0.05 vs short TTRS), 21 (30.6%) of 64 of CSO patients short TTRS (P < 0.001 vs RAA patients with short TTRS) and 3 (30%) of 10 of CSO patients with long TTRS. The analysis showed that, despite the short postventricular blanking time, FFRWO inducing undesired functioning in AT500 pacemakers is infrequent (2.8% of patients). Compared to RAA, the CSO lead position was more frequently associated with FFRWO.TTRS < 10 mm was associated with lower risk of clinically significant FFRWO in RAA.

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