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The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Tachycardia Brady Therapy

Brady Pacing in the ICD. Bradycardia pacing is part of ICD therapyWhen clinicians talk about single-chamber or dual-chamber ICDs, they're actually talking about the brady component of the deviceICDs today incorporate full-featured bradycardia pacemakersICD patients may require up to three differe

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The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Tachycardia Brady Therapy

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    1. The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders Tachycardia Brady Therapy The Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders, Tachycardia, Slide Presentation 12 Brady TherapyThe Electrical Management of Cardiac Rhythm Disorders, Tachycardia, Slide Presentation 12 Brady Therapy

    2. Brady Pacing in the ICD Bradycardia pacing is part of ICD therapy When clinicians talk about single-chamber or dual-chamber ICDs, theyre actually talking about the brady component of the device ICDs today incorporate full-featured bradycardia pacemakers ICD patients may require up to three different kinds of brady therapy Brady therapy outside of a tachy episode (conventional pacing) Brady therapy during a tachy episode (episodal pacing) Brady therapy after a tachy episode, especially after therapy delivery (post-shock pacing)

    3. Programming Pacing Parameters

    4. Conventional Pacing Parameters Mode and basic timing parameters Mode Rate AV delays Pacing output settings Pulse amplitude Pulse width Refractory periods Rate-responsive parameters Extended parameters AMS PMT and PVC options

    5. Mode Programming Considerations Permanent mode should be most appropriate for patients condition and pacing prescription Asynchronous modes (DOO, VOO) are not recommended Most ICDs will not allow more than temporary programming to such modes No sensing Can provoke ventricular tachyarrhythmias If patients has high-rate intrinsic atrial activity Program to a non-tracking mode (DDI, DDIR, VVI, VVIR) Program AMS on Use AF Suppression algorithm, if appropriate

    6. Basic Rate and Maximum Tracking Rate Defines how many pulses per minute the device will pace in the absence of intrinsic activity If the device allows for atrial tracking (DDD, DDDR mode), it will try to pace the ventricle to keep up with the intrinsic atrial rate, even if the intrinsic atrial rate exceeds the basic rate Atrial tracking was designed to encourage 1:1 AV synchrony Atrial tracking may cause high-rate ventricular pacing The Maximum Tracking Rate (MTR) sets the limit as to how fast the ventricle can be paced in response to high-rate intrinsic atrial activity

    7. Paced and Sensed AV Delays The AV Delay is the time lag between an atrial beat and a ventricular beat AV Delays can be programmed independently depending on whether they follow a Paced atrial event = paced AV Delay Sensed atrial event = sensed AV Delay The sensed AV Delay should be programmed a bit shorter than the paced AV Delay (~ 25 ms)

    8. Rate-Responsive and Shortest AV Delay Rate-responsive AV delay (RRAVD) automatically shortens the AV delay setting as the patients rate increases It has nothing to do with sensor-based rate response Shortest AV Delay is the minimum value the AV Delay can achieve, even in the presence of high-rate activity

    9. Programming Considerations The higher the basic rate, the more likely the patient will be paced DDD(R) mode is very comprehensive but it allows for atrial tracking Even if the patient has no known atrial tachyarrhythmias, program a reasonable Maximum Tracking Rate If the patient has high-rate intrinsic atrial activity, set up AMS as well Program independent values of sensed and paced AV delays Patients who are likely to achieve higher-than-base-rate activity should have RRAVD on

    10. Rate Hysteresis with Search In an ICD without hysteresis, the patients intrinsic rate must equal or exceed the base rate to inhibit pacing With hysteresis, the clinician can program a hysteresis rate that will inhibit pacing If the patients rate meets or exceeds the hysteresis rate, pacing is inhibited If the patients rate fails to meet the hysteresis rate, pacing begins at the programmed basic rate The search function searches for intrinsic activity at programmable intervals Typical settings Basic rate 60 ppm Hysteresis rate 50 bpm

    11. Programming Considerations Hysteresis is particularly appropriate for patients with a good underlying rhythm and/or intermittent bradycardia Can reduce unnecessary pacing May save battery energy Hysteresis allows the patients own rhythm the maximum opportunity to inhibit the device The hysteresis rate should always be slightly less than the basic rate (~ 10 bpm difference) Hysteresis is incompatible with biventricular or CRT pacing

    12. Ventricular Intrinsic Preference The goal of Ventricular Intrinsic Preference or VIP pacing is to reduce ventricular pacing without compromising pacing support Based on proven AutoIntrinsic Conduction Search (AICS) technology Automatically extends AV delay at programmable intervals to offer intrinsic ventricular activity maximum opportunity to break through and inhibit pacing This algorithm is particularly suitable for patients with a good underlying rhythm or who have only intermittent bradycardia

    13. Temporary Pacing Sometimes unusual parameter settings are required During threshold tests While taking real-time measurements of the ICD Acquiring or updating a template for the Morphology Discrimination Temporary pacing allows the clinician the opportunity to set up special settings for a specific short-term situation Parameters available for temporary pacing Mode Basic rate Sensed and paced AV Delays PVARP Pulse amplitude, pulse width

    14. Programming Considerations Detection is not active whenever temporary pacing is active Temporary pacing is intended for very short-term use in specific situations For example, may have to increase the pacing rate to run a capture test The advantage of temporary pacing is that the device will revert quickly (one-button) to the previously programmed parameters If you permanently program such test settings, it takes longer to restore the original values

    15. Pacing Output Output defines total energy delivered to the heart in order to pace it Pulse amplitude (in Volts) Pulse width (in ms) Pacing output is governed by threshold value plus the safety margin (2:1, 3:1) Atrium and ventricle will quite likely have different output settings Capture testing (to verify or adjust output) should be performed regularly

    16. Refractory Periods Post-ventricular atrial refractory period (PVARP) is a refractory period on the atrial channel that is initiated whenever a ventricular event occurs Designed to help prevent the atrial channel from sensing ventricular activity and inappropriately seeing it as atrial activity PVARP adjustments can help prevent pacemaker-mediated tachycardia (PMT) Ventricular refractory period Absolute blanking period (no signals are seen at all) Relative refractory period (device sees and can count signals but will not respond to them)

    17. Rate-Responsive and Shortest Refractory The healthy heart decreases its refractory period at higher rates This automatic algorithm does the same (for sensed activity) Shortest refractory establishes the minimum value that the refractory period can be in the presence of high-rate intrinsic activity

    18. Programming Considerations When adjusting output settings, it is more efficient to increase pulse amplitude (V) than pulse width (ms) to increase energy Extending the PVARP can help prevent pacemaker-mediated tachycardias (PMT) Essentially how PMT prevention algorithms work Refractory periods have an absolute and relative phase These may not be directly programmable Use caution with Rate-Responsive Refractory and Shortest Refractory Period in patients with heart failure

    19. Sensor Parameters ON, OFF, PASSIVE PASSIVE allows you to test how sensor drive would have worked without the sensor being in control Maximum Sensor Rate Threshold Slope Reaction Time Recovery Time

    20. Maximum Sensor Rate (MSR) MSR is the fastest rate the device will pace in response to sensor input Program a higher MSR for active patients than for sedentary patients MTR and MSR can be different values MTR governs ventricular pacing in response to atrial tracking (high-rate intrinsic atrial activity must be present) MSR governs response to the sensor (sensor must be in control)

    21. Other Sensor Parameters Threshold governs how much activity must occur to activate rate response Slope defines how much rate response is delivered The higher the slope, the faster the rate-responsive pacing Reaction time determines how much time it will take for the device to go from basic rate to the sensor-controlled rate Recovery time sets how fast the device goes from sensor-controlled rate back to the basic rate

    22. Programming Considerations Rate response benefits patients who are active and need pacing support to vary in response to their levels of exertion Nominal settings are appropriate for most patients Athletic, fit, and very active patients need more aggressive rate response Sedentary, bed-ridden, or extremely inactive patients should have only slight rate response Make sure the patient can tolerate pacing at sensor-driven rates PASSIVE is a great way to test drive rate response

    23. Extended Parameters Auto Mode Switch Goal: Avoid high-rate ventricular pacing in response to atrial tracking PVC Options Goal: Minimize the impact of PVCs on the patients rhythm or pacing PMT Options Goal: Prevent PMTs and terminate them if they do occur Noise Reversion Goal: Provide patient safety in the presence of overwhelming interference

    24. Programming Extended Parameters

    25. Auto Mode Switch (AMS) In DDD(R) mode, the device will try to provide 1:1 AV synchrony, even in the presence of high-rate intrinsic atrial activity (atrial tracking) Atrial tracking can result in ventricular pacing at rates well above the programmed base rate Patient may not tolerate such fast ventricular pacing Uncomfortable, may even produce symptoms AMS turns off atrial tracking Mode changes (DDD to DDI or VVI) with or without rate response Automatic

    26. PVC Options PVCs happen and they can trigger a reentry tachycardia A PACE ON PVC can be programmed on Automatically extends the PVARP to 475 ms when a PVC is detected If a retrograde P-wave occurs in that extended PVARP, 1. The PVARP is terminated 2. The ventricular output is inhibited 3. The device delivers an atrial output pulse (A PACE) 330 ms after the detected retrograde P-wave

    27. A PACE ON PVC in Action Point out: The circled event is the PVC (defined by the device as a ventricular event without a preceding atrial event) When it was detected, the algorithm automatically extended the PVARPthat means the device would not respond to an atrial event A retrograde P-wave occurs and falls in the extended PVARP (the PVARPs relative refractory period can see the atrial event but will not respond to it) The algorithm now delivers an atrial output pulse 330 ms following the sensed P-wave This breaks the potential PMT before it can start and restores normal paced behavior in the next beatPoint out: The circled event is the PVC (defined by the device as a ventricular event without a preceding atrial event) When it was detected, the algorithm automatically extended the PVARPthat means the device would not respond to an atrial event A retrograde P-wave occurs and falls in the extended PVARP (the PVARPs relative refractory period can see the atrial event but will not respond to it) The algorithm now delivers an atrial output pulse 330 ms following the sensed P-wave This breaks the potential PMT before it can start and restores normal paced behavior in the next beat

    28. PMT Options A PMT is a reentry tachycardia that incorporates the device to form the endless loop Programmable options A PACE ON PMT PASSIVE OFF Parameter settings PMT Detection Rate (nominal: 90 ppm) The device looks at V-P timing (VP-AS events) Timing (is it fast?) Stability (is the V-P interval stable?)

    29. A PACE ON PMT in Action Point out: When the PMT Detection Rate is met, the device starts to analyze VP-AS events and their relationship, looking at how fast the intervals are and how stable they are Fast, stable intervals suggest a PMT Once the algorithm diagnoses PMT, it withholds the next ventricular output and delivers an atrial output (A PACE) 330 ms after the detected retrograde P-wave (AS event) This breaks the cycle that creates a PMTPoint out: When the PMT Detection Rate is met, the device starts to analyze VP-AS events and their relationship, looking at how fast the intervals are and how stable they are Fast, stable intervals suggest a PMT Once the algorithm diagnoses PMT, it withholds the next ventricular output and delivers an atrial output (A PACE) 330 ms after the detected retrograde P-wave (AS event) This breaks the cycle that creates a PMT

    30. Noise Reversion Noise is defined as anything 50 Hz or greater These signals can interfere with pacing function Device response is unpredictable Consequences can be very serious Noise can occur in the presence of Electromagnetic interference Stray signals Certain industrial environments Sometimes investigation is required to ascertain the source of interference

    31. Noise Reversion Ventricular noise reversion DDD(R) goes to DOO mode or OFF VVI(R) goes to VOO mode or OFF Tachycardia detection is suspended If charging was in progress, charge aborts EGM is automatically stored Atrial noise reversion If an atrial mode was selected, it becomes asynchronous Tachycardia detection continues but if Rate Branch is selected, it will always indicate V>A No mode switching

    32. Ventricular Safety Standby (VSS) Crosstalk occurs when the device inappropriately senses an atrial output pulse for an intrinsic ventricular event This causes oversensing (counting ventricular events that did not really happen) which leads to ventricular under-pacing VSS monitors the ventricular channel right after an atrial output pulse and the simultaneous ventricular blanking period Helps prevent crosstalk Crosstalk could cause inappropriate inhibition of ventricular pacing

    33. Conventional Pacing Summary If the ICD patient has a standard pacing indication, program brady therapy to accommodate the patients condition Sick sinus syndrome AV block Many ICD patients do not have a standard pacing indication Program backup pacing only Use a low rate (~ 40 ppm) and simple mode (VVI) This offers pacing support if the patient truly needs it but will not unnecessarily pace the patient

    34. Conventional Pacing Summary If the patient has some LV impairment and RV pacing should be minimized (but pacing is still required) Program the pacemaker appropriately for the patients pacing condition Use VIP pacing to search out intrinsic ventricular activity (with the goal of inhibiting RV pacing as much as possible) Optimize the AV delay Echo QuickOpt algorithm Optimizing the AV delay helps avoid unnecessary RV pacing while enhancing hemodynamics and providing patients the safety of pacing support

    35. Episodal Pacing For the ICD, a tach or fib episode Begins when the very first tach or fib interval is binned Ends when the device determines Return to Sinus (RS) The patient may require pacing while an episode is in progress Pacing during a real or suspected tachyarrhythmia can expose the patient to possible risk For that reason, special pacing parameters go into place for pacing during an episode Episodal pacing has special settings and cannot be programmed OFF

    36. Programming Episodal Pacing Episodal pacing cannot be programmed OFF but it may be possible to program the mode Extended Parameters screen Mode must be non-tracking mode DDI VVI

    37. Episodal Pacing Function Once three intervals are binned as tach or fib, the device will launch episodal pacing Mode switches to the episodal mode (non-tracking but not asynchronous) Desired mode may be programmable (limited choices) If the sensor was ON, it switches to PASSIVE DDDR becomes DDI, for example Ventricular safety standby or VSS (crosstalk protection) is turned off Rate-responsive AV delay (RRAVD) is turned off

    38. Episodal Pacing in Action Point out: Episodal pacing begins on the fourth beat that is binned as tach or fib Look at the annotation line and find the F; these are fib intervals Episodal pacing begins on the fourth F and the changed mode is indicated at the top; in this example, the episodal pacing mode is VVI Fib detection continues; episodal pacing has no bearing on that Episodal pacing is not really obvious on the tracing beyond the mode change, but certain features (RRAVD, VSS, sensor) have been turned off or to passive settingsPoint out: Episodal pacing begins on the fourth beat that is binned as tach or fib Look at the annotation line and find the F; these are fib intervals Episodal pacing begins on the fourth F and the changed mode is indicated at the top; in this example, the episodal pacing mode is VVI Fib detection continues; episodal pacing has no bearing on that Episodal pacing is not really obvious on the tracing beyond the mode change, but certain features (RRAVD, VSS, sensor) have been turned off or to passive settings

    39. Episodal Pacing Episodal pacing remains in effect Through arrhythmia detection Through therapy delivery Until post-shock pacing goes into effect Episodal pacing occurs right after a shock Since episodal pacing disables VSS, it is possible for crosstalk to occur in the post-shock period of the episodal mode is DDI May be prudent to program VVI as episodal pacing mode Crosstalk is not possible in VVI mode

    40. Crosstalk During Episodal Pacing Point out: Episodal pacing goes into effect on the fourth binned fib interval (see top strip, about the middle) A vertical line indicates the change of mode with the start of episodal pacingin this case its DDI Fib detection continues and leads to the delivery of high-voltage therapy (second strip, vertical line, marked HV) The shock immediately breaks the arrhythmia; there is a pause and some slow intrinsic activity The circle shows annotations for one atrial paced event (AP) and two ventricular sensed events (VS) However, if you look at the actual tracing, there is one atrial event and one ventricular event The atrial paced event (AP) is actually sensed twiceonce appropriately on the atrial channel which calls it an AP and once inappropriately on the ventricular channel, which calls it a VS This strip provides good support for choosing VVI as the episodal pacing mode since crosstalk cannot occur in VVI mode (and this crosstalk would not have occurred if VSS had been activebut VSS is not allowed in episodal pacing)Point out: Episodal pacing goes into effect on the fourth binned fib interval (see top strip, about the middle) A vertical line indicates the change of mode with the start of episodal pacingin this case its DDI Fib detection continues and leads to the delivery of high-voltage therapy (second strip, vertical line, marked HV) The shock immediately breaks the arrhythmia; there is a pause and some slow intrinsic activity The circle shows annotations for one atrial paced event (AP) and two ventricular sensed events (VS) However, if you look at the actual tracing, there is one atrial event and one ventricular event The atrial paced event (AP) is actually sensed twiceonce appropriately on the atrial channel which calls it an AP and once inappropriately on the ventricular channel, which calls it a VS This strip provides good support for choosing VVI as the episodal pacing mode since crosstalk cannot occur in VVI mode (and this crosstalk would not have occurred if VSS had been activebut VSS is not allowed in episodal pacing)

    41. Episodal Pacing Start to Finish Point out: Episodal pacing is launched with the fourth binned fib event The vertical line shows the point at which the mode changes (here to VVI) and episodal pacing goes into effect Episodal pacing is not really very evident on the tracing beyond the mode change, but the sensor is off, and RRAVD and VSS are off Fib detection continues, fibrillation is diagnosed, and the device delivers a high-voltage shock (middle strip, first third, evident as shock icon Following the shock, there is a pause and then intrinsic activity resumes; there is a run of slow AS and VS beats (and one stray fib interval) The ICD determines that sinus rhythm has been restored (third strip, red circle) On the next beat after the return to sinus, episodal pacing discontinuesPoint out: Episodal pacing is launched with the fourth binned fib event The vertical line shows the point at which the mode changes (here to VVI) and episodal pacing goes into effect Episodal pacing is not really very evident on the tracing beyond the mode change, but the sensor is off, and RRAVD and VSS are off Fib detection continues, fibrillation is diagnosed, and the device delivers a high-voltage shock (middle strip, first third, evident as shock icon Following the shock, there is a pause and then intrinsic activity resumes; there is a run of slow AS and VS beats (and one stray fib interval) The ICD determines that sinus rhythm has been restored (third strip, red circle) On the next beat after the return to sinus, episodal pacing discontinues

    42. Post-Shock Pacing (PSP) When the myocardium is shocked, there are some immediate but temporary changes The cardiac tissue may be vulnerable for a few seconds Needs a few seconds to recover Easy to provoke an arrhythmia during this vulnerable phase The capture threshold may be temporarily elevated Patients blood pressure may decrease during shock Post-shock pacing (PSP) allows for temporary parameters to be set up to allow for pacing support during this crucial period

    43. Programming PSP

    44. PSP Parameters Pause The pause gives the myocardium a short period to recover Programmable from 1 to 7 sec Post-shock base rate Consider patient: there is no one-size-fits-all Post-shock output parameters Typically higher than normal PSP duration Programmable from 30 sec to 10 min Post-shock mode Choices are DDD, DDI, VVI, AAI No rate response

    45. PSP Pause The goal of the pause is to give the just-shocked myocardial tissue some time to recover Pacing or applying any electrical stimulus to this vulnerable tissue may provoke a new arrhythmia Programmable from 1 to 7 sec The timer for the PSP begins with the delivery of the shock itself Pause can allow post-shock intrinsic activity to emerge

    46. Post-Shock Base Rate HIGHER than normal rate Compensates for drop in blood pressure that may occur with therapy delivery Increased heart rate increases cardiac output May help compensate for temporary hypotension LOWER than normal rate Allows stressed myocardial tissue more time to recover Gives intrinsic activity more opportunity to break through Consider the patients condition and his response to shock (if known)

    47. Post-Shock Output Parameters & Duration Most patients experience an immediate but very short-term increase in pacing thresholds It is recommended to increase output parameters Pulse amplitude Pulse width Nominal settings are 7.5 V and 1.5 ms PSP duration can be programmed from 30 sec to 10 min When PSP ends, the normal programmed parameters resume

    48. PSP in Action Point out: When this strip starts, episodal pacing is already in force Therapy is delivered in the first third of the upper strip (see shock icon) The PS timer launches with the therapy delivery and times out; during that time there is no pacing at all The PS duration timer also launches with the therapy delivery Pacing at the PS rate and PS output starts as soon as the PS timer times outhowever, the episodal pacing mode remains in effect until there is a return to sinus. In this example, the episodal pacing mode is VVI. After shock, the device paces in the episodal mode at the PS rate and output settings until the device determines there is a return to sinus. That is called out toward the left in the bottom strip. Once Return to Sinus is confirmed episodal pacing ends. The device now continues in PSP until the PS Duration times out. This may mean a change in mode. In this case, the new mode is circled as PSP takes over. It happens to be VVI which in this instance is the same as the episodal mode. However, had the modes been different, the mode change would have occurred where shown. PSP continues until the timer expires.Point out: When this strip starts, episodal pacing is already in force Therapy is delivered in the first third of the upper strip (see shock icon) The PS timer launches with the therapy delivery and times out; during that time there is no pacing at all The PS duration timer also launches with the therapy delivery Pacing at the PS rate and PS output starts as soon as the PS timer times outhowever, the episodal pacing mode remains in effect until there is a return to sinus. In this example, the episodal pacing mode is VVI. After shock, the device paces in the episodal mode at the PS rate and output settings until the device determines there is a return to sinus. That is called out toward the left in the bottom strip. Once Return to Sinus is confirmed episodal pacing ends. The device now continues in PSP until the PS Duration times out. This may mean a change in mode. In this case, the new mode is circled as PSP takes over. It happens to be VVI which in this instance is the same as the episodal mode. However, had the modes been different, the mode change would have occurred where shown. PSP continues until the timer expires.

    49. Conclusion Brady therapy in an ICD invovles Pacing outside of a tachy epsiode (conventional pacing) Pacing during an episode (episodal pacing) Pacing following a tachy episode (post-shock pacing) Conventional pacing should be set up in accordance to the patients pacing indication (and if there is none, then only backup pacing should be provided) Episodal pacing should avoid competitive pacing or pacing into the tachyarrhythmia Post-shock pacing should not stress vulnerable shocked tissue while still providing necessary pacing support

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