Ventricular pacing with premature excitation for treatment of hypertensive-cardiac hypertrophy with cavity-obliteration

David A. Kass*, Chen Huan Chen, Maurice W. Talbot, Carlos E. Rochitte, João A.C. Lima, Ronald D. Berger, Hugh Calkins

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background - Hypertensive left ventricular hypertrophy with supranormal systolic ejection and distal cavity obliteration (HHCO) can result in debilitating exertional fatigue and dyspnea. Dual-chamber pacing with ventricular preactivation generates discoordinate contraction, which can limit cavity obliteration and thereby increase potential ejection reserve. Accordingly, we hypothesized that pacing may improve exercise tolerance long- term in this syndrome. Methods and Results - Dual-chamber pacemakers were implanted in 9 patients with exertional dyspnea caused by HHCO. Intrinsic atrial rate was sensed, and ventricular preactivation was achieved by shortening the atrial-ventricular delay. Pacing was on or off for successive 3-month periods (randomized, double-blind, crossover design), followed by 6 additional pacing-on months. Metabolic exercise testing, quality-of-life assessment, and rest and dobutamine-stress echocardiographic/Doppler data were obtained. After 3 months of pacing-on, exercise duration rose from 324±133 to 588±238 s (mean±SD; P=0.001, with 7 of 9 patients improving ≥30%), and maximal oxygen consumption increased from 13.6±2.9 to 16.7±3.3 mL of O2·min-1·kg-1 (P<0.02). Both parameters were little changed from baseline during the pacing-off period. Improved exercise capacity persisted at 1-year follow-up. Clinical symptoms and activities of daily living improved during the pacing-on period and stayed improved at 1 year, but they were little changed during the pacing-off period. Despite similar basal values, stroke volume (P<0.001) and cardiac output (P<0.02) increased with dobutamine stimulation 2 to 3 times more after 1 year of follow-up as compared with baseline. Conclusions - Long-term dual-chamber pacing can improve exercise capacity, cardiac reserve, clinical symptoms, and activities of daily living in patients with HHCO. This therapy may provide a novel alternative for patients in whom traditional pharmacological treatment proves inadequate.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)807-812
Number of pages6
JournalCirculation
Volume100
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - 24 Aug 1999

Keywords

  • Exercise
  • Heart failure
  • Hypertension
  • Hypertrophy
  • Pacing

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