the electrical management of cardiac rhythm disorders bradycardia device course

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The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

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Page 1: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders

Bradycardia

Device Course

Page 2: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Pacemaker Components

Page 3: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Leads

● Epicardial

● Endocardial

Page 4: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Goals of Cardiac Pacing● The electrical management of bradyarrhythmias requires

○ Ability to deliver enough energy to consistently depolarize the heart (capture)

○ Ability to correctly sense intrinsic cardiac activity● These functions are affected by many factors

○ Settings of output parameters (pulse amplitude, pulse width)

○ Sensitivity parameter settings○ Impedance○ Electrical concepts

Page 5: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Capture● The capture threshold is defined as the minimum amount

of electrical energy required to consistently depolarize the myocardium

● When a pacemaker output causes a depolarization, that is also called “capture”

● The capture threshold is also called the pacing threshold or the stimulation threshold

● The capture threshold is not constant○ It can change over time (disease, medications, age)○ It can even change over the course of the day!

Page 6: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

What Affects the Capture Threshold?

• Activity level• Posture• Time of day• Comorbidity

• Heart failure• Meals• Drugs• Disease progression

Page 7: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Capture Threshold Values

Atrial Ventricular

Acute Threshold < 1.5 V < 1.0 V

Chronic Threshold < 2.5 V < 2.5 V

Threshold values at implant should be low; expect chronic thresholds to increase

These are suggested values and may not be possible for all patients

Page 8: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Sensing● Sensing refers to how well the pacemaker is able to

“listen to” or perceive intrinsic cardiac events● Important things to consider when talking about sensing

○ Surface ECG○ Intracardiac electrogram (EGM)○ Sensing threshold○ Sense amplifier○ Sensitivity setting and sensitivity safety margin○ Unipolar/bipolar configurations○ Electromagnet interference

Page 9: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Surface ECG/Intracardiac EGM

● Surface ECG: graphic depiction of heart’s electrical signals recorded from electrodes on the body’s surface

● Intracardiac EGM: graphic depiction of the heart’s electrical signals recorded by electrodes from inside the heart (pacing lead)

Page 10: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Sensitivity Safety Margin

● Sensing thresholds are not constant and vary with many factors

● The sensitivity safety margin allows reliable sensing even with fluctuations in the sensing threshold

● Using this formula, the safety margin should be at least 2 at implant

Safety margin =Sensing Threshold

Sensitivity Setting

Page 11: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Electromagnetic Interference (EMI)● EMI is defined as electrical signals of nonphysiologic

origin● May interfere with pacemaker (temporarily or

permanently)● Common sources of EMI

○ Cardioversion/defibrillation○ Electrocautery○ MRIs○ Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL)○ Therapeutic radiation○ Radiofrequency ablation

Page 12: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

What About Cardioversion/Defibrillation?● May permanently damage the pulse generator● Can temporarily inhibit or reprogram the pacemaker

○ Backup or noise reversion mode● Myocardial thermal damage secondary to shock which

may result in ventricular fibrillation, myocardial infarction, or both

● Guidelines○ Evaluate potential device interactions○ Place paddles 4 to 6 inches away from implanted

pacemaker○ Orient paddles in anterior/posterior position, if possible

Page 13: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

What About Electrocautery?

● May reprogram or permanently damage the pacemaker● May inhibit the pacemaker● May cause the device to go into backup or noise

reversion mode● Myocardial thermal damage secondary to the

transmission of the electrical energy may result in VF, MI, or both

● Guidelines○ Contraindicated

Page 14: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

What About MRI?

● The magnet in the MRI device can cause asynchronous pacing (pacing without sensing)

● Guidelines○ Generally contraindicated

● Magna-Safe Study

Page 15: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

What About Lithotripsy?

● The vibrations in extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy can damage the pacemaker (especially pacemakers with sensors, i.e. rate-adaptive units)

● Guidelines○ Program to VVI or VOO mode○ Keep focal point of lithotripter at least 6 inches away

from the implanted pacemaker○ Monitor the heart throughout the procedure

Page 16: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

What About Therapeutic Radiation?● Damage depends on dose● Damage is cumulative; monitor device throughout course

of radiation therapy● Transistors may fail● Pacemakers may fail but mode of failure cannot be

predicted● Guidelines

○ Therapeutic ionizing radiation is contraindicated○ If therapeutic radiation is used, pacemaker should be

shielded or moved to a less vulnerable location

Page 17: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

What About Radiofrequency Ablation?● RF ablation can temporarily or permanently reprogram

the pulse generator● Guidelines

○ Interrogate the pacemaker following the procedure to verify proper function

○ If necessary, reprogram

Page 18: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Myopotentials● Myopotentials are muscle noises that are sensed by the

pacemaker● Can inhibit pacing

○ The pacemaker senses the myopotential and inhibits the output, thinking the heart has beat on its own!

● Can interfere with sensing● Can cause inappropriate pacing

○ The pacemaker senses myopotential noise and inappropriately “thinks” it is atrial activity; it then tries to pace the ventricle to keep up or track that atrial activity

Page 19: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

More EMI Sources

● Arc welding● Automobile alternators● Cell phones

○ Phone antenna should not overlap area of implanted pacemaker

○ Talk on other side from implanted device

○ Do not carry an activated cell phone near the implanted pacemaker

○ May cause inappropriate inhibition, asynchronous pacing, backup mode, inappropriate rate adaptation, and mode switching

○ Cellular Tested only from St. Jude Medical

Page 20: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

EMI in the Medical Environment

● Electrocoagulation from electrocautery

● Defibrillation● Electroconvulsive therapy● Diathermy● MRI● Stimulators (e.g.

transcutaneous nerve)● Dental equipment● Diagnostic ultrasound● Low-frequency acupuncture● Lithotripsy

Page 21: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

EMI in the Industrial Environment

● Arc welding● Power lines● Transformers● Radio and TV transmitters● Static charge● Large metal frames in

magnetic fields● Induction furnaces and

heaters● Electrical switches

Page 22: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

EMI in the Public Environment

● CB radio● Radiofrequency

transmissions● Telecommunications

antennas● Airport metal detectors● Anti-theft detectors in stores

○ These may not be marked!

● Digital cell phones

Page 23: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Effects of EMI● Pacemaker protection

○ Hardware backup circuits (to protect against loss of memory or software errors)

○ Shields● Effects

○ EMI inhibition: pulse-to-pulse interval extends to the point that the pacemaker does not pace as often as it should.

○ Noise reversion: change in mode (typically to asynchronous pacing at the programmed rate) which may require reprogramming.

○ EMI tracking: acceleration of pacing as the pacemaker tries to track electromagnetic signals (“thinking” they are atrial signals)

Page 24: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Pacemaker Overview

NASPE / BPEG (NBG) Pacemaker Code

Page 25: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

NAPSE/BPEG Generic (NBG) Code

Position

Category

LettersUsed

I II III IV V

Chamber(s)Paced

Chamber(s)Sensed

Responseto Sensing Rate modulation Multisite Pacing

O-None

R-Rate modulation

O-None

A-Atrium

V-Ventricle

D-Dual(A+V)

S- Single(A or V)

S- Single(A or V)

O-None

A-Atrium

V-Ventricle

D-Dual(A+V)

O-None

T-Triggered

I-Inhibited

D-Dual(T+I)

O-None

A-Atrium

V-Ventricle

D-Dual(A+V)

Manufacturer’s

Designation

Only

Page 26: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Magnet Use● Pacemakers

○ Pace Asynchronously (VOO or DOO) at the given battery rate (Temporarily)

○ Device will revert back to exactly the same parameters it was programmed to once the magnet is removed

● ICD

○ Will disable ICD Shock Therapy (Temporarily)

○ Does not affect pacing

○ Device will revert back to exactly the same parameters it was programmed to once the magnet is removed.

● Magnet must be placed over the device in order for temporary changes to occur.

Page 27: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

A Systematic Approach to Diagnosing Rhythm Strips● Measure Base Rate● Measure AV/PV Interval● Verify Atrial capture● Verify Atrial sensing● Verify Ventricular capture● Verify Ventricular sensing● Verify Underlying rhythm● Document

Page 28: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Base Rate 60 ppm

MTR 120 ppm

AVD 200 ms

PVARP 250 ms

ECG # 1

Dual Chamber ECG Analysis

What is the Analysis?

Page 29: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

ECG # 2

Dual Chamber ECG Analysis

Base Rate 60 ppm

MTR 120 ppm

AVD 200 ms

PVARP 250 ms

What is the analysis?

Page 30: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Dual Chamber ECG Analysis

Base Rate 60 ppmMTR 120 ppmAV 200 msPV 200 msPVARP 250 ms

ECG # 3

● What is the analysis

Page 31: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Dual Chamber ECG Analysis● What is the analysis?

Base Rate 60 ppmMTR 120 ppmAV 200 msPV 200 msPVARP 250 ms

ECG # 4

Page 32: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

ECG Tracing Results!!!● #1- Normal ECG –Dual chamber pacing and Atrial pacing

w/ Ventricular (intrinsic) sensing.● #2- Loss of atrial capture.● #3- Normal ECG● #4-No ventricular sensing and loss of ventricular capture.

Page 33: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

ECG #5

Page 34: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Answer ● Slide #5

○ Normal Sinus Rhythm○ Can not determine any pacemaker function

• Pacers are usually set to pace above 50 or 60 bpm• Single Chamber ICD- Pace above 40bpm

○ Pacemakers only work when?• Native heart rate goes below the base rate• An intrinsic beat does not occur before the set Paced and

Sensed AV Delays.• Set at an Asynchronous Mode (VOO or DOO)

Page 35: The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Bradycardia Device Course

Thank you for your time!!!