Conduction System Pacing in Pediatrics and Congenital Heart Disease, a Single Center Series of 24 Patients.

Congenital heart disease His-bundle pacing Pediatrics

Journal

Pediatric cardiology
ISSN: 1432-1971
Titre abrégé: Pediatr Cardiol
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 8003849

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
09 Jun 2022
Historique:
received: 09 05 2021
accepted: 20 05 2022
entrez: 9 6 2022
pubmed: 10 6 2022
medline: 10 6 2022
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

His-bundle pacing has demonstrated feasibility in numerous adult studies to reverse and prevent pacing-induced cardiomyopathy, however, is met with higher capture thresholds with deployment sheaths designed for adults with his-bundles in the typical location. To describe 24 pediatric and adult congenital patients post-physiologic pacing. Patients at the University of Minnesota Masonic Children's Hospital with congenital complete heart block or congenital heart disease and atrioventricular block presented for pacemaker placement between November 2019 and January 2021. Twenty-four patients had attempted his-bundle placement using either Medtronic's C315 or C308 sheaths and 3830 leads except for 3 patients who had Boston Scientific's His system with the Shape 3 sheath and 7842 leads. Twenty-four total patients underwent physiologic pacing (23 his-bundle, 13 female, 11 male) with median age of 14 years (range 8-39 years) with median weight of 51 kg (range 21.2-81 kg) with five right-sided implants performed. Twelve patients had congenital heart disease including atrioventricular canal defects, tetralogy of Fallot, and ventricular septal defect repairs (nine patients with ventricular septal defect repairs). Twelve patients had selective His-bundle pacing (six with congenital heart disease). Median threshold to capture was 0.5 V at 0.4 ms (range 0.4 to 1.1 V at 0.4 ms), impedance 570 ohms (range 456-1140 ohms), and sensing median of 9.7 mV (range 1.5-13.8 mV if present). The median follow-up time was 610 days (range 240-760 days). No complications occurred peri-procedurally or during follow-up. His-bundle pacing is feasible in pediatric and congenital heart disease patients.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35678827
doi: 10.1007/s00246-022-02942-9
pii: 10.1007/s00246-022-02942-9
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Subventions

Organisme : Boston Scientific Corporation
ID : Innovator's Award

Informations de copyright

© 2022. The Author(s).

Références

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Auteurs

Amanda Gordon (A)

Department of Pediatric Cardiology, University of Minnesota, 5th Floor East Building, 2450 Riverside Avenue, Minneapolis, MN, 55454, USA.

Erick Jimenez (E)

Department of Pediatric Cardiology, University of Minnesota, 5th Floor East Building, 2450 Riverside Avenue, Minneapolis, MN, 55454, USA.
Department of Pediatric Cardiology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital, Cincinnati, USA.

Daniel Cortez (D)

Department of Pediatric Cardiology, University of Minnesota, 5th Floor East Building, 2450 Riverside Avenue, Minneapolis, MN, 55454, USA. dcortez@umn.edu.
Department of Pediatric Cardiology, UC Davis Medical Center, Sacramento, USA. dcortez@umn.edu.

Classifications MeSH