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Article
Clinical feasibility of exercise-based A-V interval optimization for cardiac resynchronization: a pilot study
Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology : PACE
  • Indrajit Choudhuri, Advocate Aurora Health
  • Dean Maccarter
  • Rachael Shaw
  • Steve Anderson
  • John St Cyr
  • Imran Niazi
Affiliations

Aurora Cardiovascular Services, Aurora Sinai/Aurora St. Luke's Medical Centers

Publication Date
7-16-2014
Abstract

BACKGROUND: One-third of eligible patients fail to respond to cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). Current methods to "optimize" the atrio-ventricular (A-V) interval are performed at rest, which may limit its efficacy during daily activities. We hypothesized that low-intensity cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPX) could identify the most favorable physiologic combination of specific gas exchange parameters reflecting pulmonary blood flow or cardiac output, stroke volume, and left atrial pressure to guide determination of the optimal A-V interval.

METHODS: We assessed relative feasibility of determining the optimal A-V interval by three methods in 17 patients who underwent optimization of CRT: (1) resting echocardiographic optimization (the Ritter method), (2) resting electrical optimization (intrinsic A-V interval and QRS duration), and (3) during low-intensity, steady-state CPX. Five sequential, incremental A-V intervals were programmed in each method. Assessment of cardiopulmonary stability and potential influence on the CPX-based method were assessed.

RESULTS: CPX and determination of a physiological optimal A-V interval was successfully completed in 94.1% of patients, slightly higher than the resting echo-based approach (88.2%). There was a wide variation in the optimal A-V delay determined by each method. There was no observed cardiopulmonary instability or impact of the implant procedure that affected determination of the CPX-based optimized A-V interval.

CONCLUSIONS: Determining optimized A-V intervals by CPX is feasible. Proposed mechanisms explaining this finding and long-term impact require further study.

Document Type
Article
PubMed ID
25040191
Citation Information
Choudhuri I, Maccarter D, Shaw R, Anderson S, St Cyr J, Niazi I. Clinical feasibility of exercise-based A-V interval optimization for cardiac resynchronization: a pilot study. Pacing Clin Electrophysiol. 2014 Jul 16.