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Europace 2009 11(2):191-199; doi:10.1093/europace/eun377
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Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author 2009. For permissions please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org


Pacing and Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy

Improved cardiac performance through pacing-induced diaphragmatic stimulation: a novel electrophysiological approach in heart failure management?

Markus Roos1, Richard Kobza1, Peiman Jamshidi1, Peter Bauer2, Thérèse Resink3,*, Reinhard Schlaepfer4, Peter Stulz4, Michel Zuber1 and Paul Erne1,*

1 Department of Cardiology, Kantonsspital, Luzern, 6000 Luzern, Switzerland; 2 Inovise Medical, Inc., Portland, OR, USA; 3 Department of Biomedicine, Basel University Hospital, Hebelstrasse 20, Basel CH 4031, Switzerland; 4 Department of Heart Surgery, Kantonsspital, Luzern, Switzerland

Aims: Pharmacological conditioning of the phrenic nerve can positively influence systolic performance, and diaphragm activation improves ventilatory function. Here we investigate whether pacing-induced diaphragmatic stimulation (PIDS) may improve left ventricular (LV) systolic function.

Methods and results: We studied a total of 35 patients (4 females, mean age 67 ± 9 years, ejection fraction 61 ± 14%) within 7 days following open heart surgery. The haemodynamic impact of different PIDS and ventricular pacing configurations and coupling intervals was tested in 132 episodes. Success of PIDS was assessed using fluoroscopy and palpation. Left ventricular systolic performance was recorded using the electromechanical activation time (EMAT) obtained through acoustic cardiography. Eighteen subjects were tested in the catheter laboratory and 17 in the intensive care unit. For both groups, EMAT significantly improved when the diaphragm was stimulated 20 ms after the onset of ventricular pacing. In all instances, PIDS could be induced with or without causing patient symptoms, and LV systolic performance improvement was comparable in symptomatic and asymptomatic modes. No desensitization of the diaphragm was observed following PIDS delivery 4–6 and 24 h following open heart surgery.

Conclusion: Pacing-induced diaphragmatic stimulation, if synchronized to the onset of ventricular contraction with a fixed, non-zero coupling delay, can improve LV systolic function reproducibly for at least 1 h without causing patient symptoms. The absence of diaphragm desensitization further underscores the potential of PIDS as a practical therapeutic approach in device-based heart failure management.

Key Words: Cardiac pacing, Diaphragm stimulation, Acoustic cardiography, Heart failure


* Corresponding authors. Tel: +41 41 205 5208, Fax: +41 41 205 2234, Email: paul.erne{at}ksl.ch (P.E.) or therese-j.resink{at}unibas.ch (T.R.)

Manuscript submitted 29 September 2008. Accepted after revision 8 December 2008.


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