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A Blended Sensor Restores Chronotropic Response More Favorably than an Accelerometer Alone in Pacemaker Patients: The LIFE Study Results
Author(s) -
COMAN JAMES,
FREEDMAN ROGER,
KOPLAN BRUCE A.,
REEVES RUSSELL,
SANTUCCI PETER,
STOLEN KIRA Q.,
KRAUS STACIA M.,
MEYER TIMOTHY E.
Publication year - 2008
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.1540-8159.2008.01207.x
Subject(s) - medicine , chronotropic , treadmill , cardiology , heart rate , quality of life (healthcare) , population , physical therapy , blood pressure , nursing , environmental health
Background:Adaptive rate sensors used in permanent pacemakers incorporate an accelerometer (XL) to increase heart rate with activity. Limited data exists regarding the relative benefit of a blended sensor (BS) (XL and minute ventilation) versus XL alone in restoring chronotropic response (CR) in chronotropically incompetent (CI) patients.Methods:One thousand five hundred thirty‐eight patients from the limiting chronotropic incompetence for pacemaker recipients (LIFE) study were implanted with a pacemaker and 1,256 patients had data collected at 1 month. Patients performed a treadmill test 1‐month postimplant while programed in nonrate responsive mode (DDD‐60) to determine CI. Only patients who completed at least three exercise stages and achieved a peak perceived exertion ≥16 were included in the analyses. The metabolic chronotropic relationship (MCR) slope was used to evaluate CR in 547 patients. Patients were randomized to XL or BS with a conservative fixed rate response factor (XL = 8, MV = 4). CI patients performed a follow‐up 6‐month treadmill test.Results:CI prevalence in this patient population (n = 547) was 34%. No differences in baseline characteristics existed between groups. Although both groups showed significant within‐group improvements in MCR slope from 1 to 6 months (both P < 0.001), the BS group had a significantly higher MCR slope at 6 months compared to the XL group (P = 0.011). Improvement in quality of life (QOL) did not differ between groups .Conclusions:In this general pacemaker population with CI, a BS programed empirically restores CR more favorably than an XL sensor programed nominally. Further studies are needed to determine if individual sensor optimization would lead to improvement in functional capacity, higher MCR slopes, and QOL.

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