Pacemakers and AICD - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Pacemakers and AICD

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Pacemakers and AICD s – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pacemakers and AICD


1
PacemakersandAICDs
2
Pacemaker Basics
  • Provides electrical stimuli to cause cardiac
    contraction when intrinsic cardiac activity is
    inappropriately slow or absent
  • Sense intrinsic cardiac electric potentials

3
ICD Basics
  • Designed to treat a cardiac tachydysrythmia
  • Performs cardioversion/defibrillation
  • Ventricular rate exceeds programmed cut-off rate
  • ATP (antitachycardia pacing)
  • Overdrive pacing in an attempt to terminate
    ventricular tachycardias
  • Some have pacemaker function (combo devices)

4
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5
Pacemaker and ICD Basics
  • Pulse Generators
  • Placed subcutaneously or submuscularly
  • Connected to leads
  • Battery
  • Most commonly lithium-iodide type
  • Life span 5 to 8 years
  • Output voltage decreases gradually
  • Makes sudden battery failure unlikely

6
Pacemaker and ICD Basics
  • Asynchronous
  • Fixed rate
  • Impulse produced at a set rate
  • No relation to patients intrinsic cardiac
    activity
  • Susceptible to Torsades if impulse coincides with
    t wave

7
Pacemaker and ICD Basics
  • Synchronous
  • Demand mode
  • Sensing circuit searches for intrinsic
    depolarization potential
  • If absent, a pacing response is generated
  • Can mimic intrinsic electrical activity pattern
    of the heart

8
Pacemaker Nomenclature
I II III IV V
Chamber Paced Chamber Sensed Response to Sensing Rate Modulation, Programmability Anti-tachycardia Features
AAtrium AAtrium TTriggered PSimple PPacing
VVentricle VVentricle IInhibited MMulti-programmable SShock
DDual DDual DDual RRate Adaptive DDual
ONone ONone ONone CCommunicating
ONone
9
Examples
  • VVI
  • Paces ventricle
  • Senses ventricle
  • Inhibited by a sensed ventricular event

10
Pacing Nomenclature Examples
  • AAT
  • Paces atria
  • Senses atria
  • Triggers generator to fire if atria sensed
  • DDD
  • Paces atria and ventricle
  • Senses atria and ventricle
  • Atrial triggered and ventricular inhibited
  • EKG 2 spikes

11
DDD
Atrial Spike
Ventricular Spike
12
Pacemaker Lead System
  • Endocardial leads placed via central access
  • Placed in right ventricle and/or atria
  • Fixed to the endocardium via screws or tines
  • Experimental pacing systems
  • 2 atrial leads (minimize afib)
  • Biventricular pacing

13
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15
Magnet Inhibition
  • Closes an internal reed switch
  • Causes sensing to be inhibited
  • Temporarily turns pacemaker into asynchronous
    mode (set rate)
  • Does NOT turn pacemaker off
  • Rate can confer info regarding battery life
  • Distinct rates for BOL, ERI, EOL

16
Pacemaker Indications
  • Absolute indications
  • Sick sinus syndrome
  • Symptomatic sinus bradycardia
  • Tachy-brady syndrome
  • Afib with slow ventricular response
  • 3rd degree heart block
  • Chronotropic incompetence
  • Inability to increase heart rate to match
    exercise
  • Prolonged QT syndrome

17
Pacemaker Indications
  • 3rd Degree heart block

18
Pacemaker Indications
  • Relative indications
  • Cardiomyopathy
  • Dilated
  • Hypertrophic
  • Severe refractory neurocardiogenic syncope
  • Paroxysmal atrial fibrillation

19
ICD Indications
  • Generally
  • Used in cases where there was a previous cardiac
    arrest
  • Or, patients with undetermined origin or
    continued VT or VF despite medical interventions

20
Pacemaker Complications
  • EKG abnormalities due to
  • Failure to output
  • Failure to capture
  • Sensing abnormalities
  • Operative failures

21
Pacemaker Failure to Output
  • Definition
  • No pacing spike present despite indication to
    pace
  • Etiology
  • Battery failure, lead fracture, break in lead
    insulation, oversensing, poor lead connection,
    cross-talk
  • Atrial output is sensed by ventricular lead

22
Pacemaker Failure to Capture
  • Definition
  • Pacing spike is not followed by either an atrial
    or ventricular complex
  • Etiology
  • Lead fracture or dislodgement, break in lead
    insulation, elevated pacing threshold, MI at lead
    tip, drugs, metabolic abnormalities, cardiac
    perforation, poor lead connection

23
Pacemaker Sensing Abnormalities
  • Oversensing
  • Senses noncardiac electrical activity and is
    inhibited from correctly pacing
  • Etiology
  • Muscular activity (diaphragm or pecs), EMI, cell
    phone held within 10cm of pulse generator
  • Undersensing
  • Incorrectly misses intrinsic depolarization and
    paces
  • Etiology
  • Poor lead positioning, lead dislodgement, magnet
    application, low battery states, MI

24
Pacemaker Operative Failures
  • Due to pacemaker placement
  • Pneumothorax
  • Pericarditis
  • Perforated atrium or ventricle
  • Dislodgement of leads
  • Infection or erosion of pacemaker pocket
  • Infective endocarditis (rare)
  • Venous thrombosis

25
Pacemaker Complications
  • Pacemaker syndrome
  • Patient feels worse after pacemaker placement
  • Presents with progressive worsening of CHF
    symptoms
  • Due to loss of atrioventricular synchrony,
    pathway now reversed and ventricular origin of
    beat

26
ICD Complications
  • Similar to pacemaker complications
  • Operative failures
  • Same as pacemakers
  • Sensing and pacing failures
  • Inappropriate cardioversion
  • Ineffective cardioversion/defibrillation
  • Device deactivation

27
ICD Sensing failures
  • Similar to pacmakers
  • Oversensing
  • Undersensing
  • Appropriate failure to treat
  • Programmed cut off at 180 bpm
  • If V Tach occurs at 160 bpms, appropriately fails
    to cardiovert

28
ICD Inappropriate Cardioversion
  • Most frequent complications
  • Provokes pain and anxiety in pts
  • Consider when
  • Pt is in afib
  • With ventricular response gt programmed cut off
  • Received multiple shocks in rapid succession
  • Etiology
  • Afib, T-wave oversensing, lead fracture,
    insulation breakage, MRI, EMI

29
ICD Inappropriate Cardioversion
  • Treatment
  • Magnet over ICD inhibits further shocks
  • Does NOT inhibit bradycardiac pacing
  • Note
  • Some older devices produce beep with each QRS
  • If left on for gt30 seconds, ICD disabled and
    continous beep
  • To reactivate, lift off magnet and then replace
    for gt 30 seconds, beep will return with each QRS

30
ICD Failure to Deliver Cardioversion
  • Etiology
  • Failure to sense, lead fracture, EMI, inadvertent
    ICD deactivation
  • Management
  • External defibrillation and cardioversion
  • Do not withhold therapy for fear of damaging ICD
  • If pts internal defibrillator activates during
    chest compressions, you may feel a mild shock (no
    reports of deaths related to this)
  • Antidysrhymthic medications

31
ICD Ineffective Cardioversion
  • Etiology
  • Inadequate energy output
  • Rise in the defibrillation threshold
  • MI at the lead site
  • Lead fracture
  • Insulation breakage
  • Pre-programmed set of therapies per dysrythmia
  • Manufacturer specific
  • Once number of attempts reached, will not deliver
    further shocks until new episode is declared

32
Electromagnetic Interference
  • Can interfere with function of pacemaker or ICD
  • Device misinterprets the EMI causing
  • Rate alteration
  • Sensing abnormalities
  • Asynchronous pacing
  • Noise reversion
  • Reprogramming

33
Electromagnetic Interference
  • Examples
  • Metal detectors
  • Cell phones
  • High voltage power lines
  • Some home appliances (microwave)

34
Electromagnetic Interference
  • Intensity of electromagnetic field decreases
    inversely with the square of the distance from
    the source
  • Newer pacemakers and ICDs are being built with
    increased internal shielding
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