Cardiologist-Directed Sedation Management in Patients Undergoing Transvenous Lead Extraction: A Single-Centre Retrospective Analysis.

cardiac implantable electronic devices cardiologist-directed deep sedation deep sedation lead revision transvenous lead extraction

Journal

Journal of clinical medicine
ISSN: 2077-0383
Titre abrégé: J Clin Med
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101606588

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
26 Jul 2023
Historique:
received: 18 05 2023
revised: 07 07 2023
accepted: 18 07 2023
medline: 12 8 2023
pubmed: 12 8 2023
entrez: 12 8 2023
Statut: epublish

Résumé

The demand for transvenous lead extraction (TLE) has increased. In line with this, the safety of such procedures has also increased. Traditionally, TLE is performed under resource-intensive general anaesthesia. This study aims to evaluate the safety and outcomes of Cardiologist-lead deep sedation for TLE. We retrospectively analysed 328 TLE procedures performed under deep sedation from 2016 to 2019. TLE procedures were performed by experienced electrophysiologists. Sedation was administered by a specifically trained cardiologist (bolus midazolam/fentanyl and propofol infusion). Procedural sedation data including blood pressure, medication administration and sedation time were collected. Complications related to sedation and the operative component of the procedure were analysed retrospectively. The sedation-associated complication rate during TLE was 22.0%. The most common complication (75% of complications) was hypotension requiring noradrenaline, followed by bradycardia requiring atropine (13% of complications). Additionally, the unplanned presence of an anaesthesiologist was needed in one case (0.3%). Deep sedation was achieved with midazolam (mean dose 42.9 ± 26.5 µg/kg), fentanyl (mean dose 0.4 ± 0.6 µg/kg) and propofol (mean dose 3.5 ± 1.2 mg/kg/h). There was no difference in medication dosage between those with a sedation-associated complication and those without. Sedation-associated complications appeared significantly more in patients with reduced LVEF ( Deep sedation for TLE can be safely performed by a specifically trained cardiologist, with a transition to general anaesthesia required in only 0.3% of cases. We continue to recommend the on-call availability of an anaesthesiologist and cardiac surgeon in case of major complications.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
The demand for transvenous lead extraction (TLE) has increased. In line with this, the safety of such procedures has also increased. Traditionally, TLE is performed under resource-intensive general anaesthesia. This study aims to evaluate the safety and outcomes of Cardiologist-lead deep sedation for TLE.
METHODS METHODS
We retrospectively analysed 328 TLE procedures performed under deep sedation from 2016 to 2019. TLE procedures were performed by experienced electrophysiologists. Sedation was administered by a specifically trained cardiologist (bolus midazolam/fentanyl and propofol infusion). Procedural sedation data including blood pressure, medication administration and sedation time were collected. Complications related to sedation and the operative component of the procedure were analysed retrospectively.
RESULTS RESULTS
The sedation-associated complication rate during TLE was 22.0%. The most common complication (75% of complications) was hypotension requiring noradrenaline, followed by bradycardia requiring atropine (13% of complications). Additionally, the unplanned presence of an anaesthesiologist was needed in one case (0.3%). Deep sedation was achieved with midazolam (mean dose 42.9 ± 26.5 µg/kg), fentanyl (mean dose 0.4 ± 0.6 µg/kg) and propofol (mean dose 3.5 ± 1.2 mg/kg/h). There was no difference in medication dosage between those with a sedation-associated complication and those without. Sedation-associated complications appeared significantly more in patients with reduced LVEF (
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
Deep sedation for TLE can be safely performed by a specifically trained cardiologist, with a transition to general anaesthesia required in only 0.3% of cases. We continue to recommend the on-call availability of an anaesthesiologist and cardiac surgeon in case of major complications.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37568301
pii: jcm12154900
doi: 10.3390/jcm12154900
pmc: PMC10420171
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

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Auteurs

Matthias Bock (M)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.
DZHK (German Centre for Cardiovascular Research, Partner Site Munich, Heart Alliance), 80336 Munich, Germany.

Matthew O'Connor (M)

Auckland City Hospital, Department of Cardiology, Auckland 1023, New Zealand.

Amir Chouchane (A)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Philip Schmidt (P)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Claudia Schaarschmidt (C)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Katharina Knoll (K)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.
DZHK (German Centre for Cardiovascular Research, Partner Site Munich, Heart Alliance), 80336 Munich, Germany.

Fabian Bahlke (F)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Florian Englert (F)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Theresa Storz (T)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Marc Kottmaier (M)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Teresa Trenkwalder (T)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Tilko Reents (T)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Felix Bourier (F)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Marta Telishevska (M)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Sarah Lengauer (S)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Gabriele Hessling (G)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Isabel Deisenhofer (I)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Christof Kolb (C)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.

Carsten Lennerz (C)

German Heart Centre Munich, Department of Electrophysiology, Technical University of Munich, 80636 Munich, Germany.
DZHK (German Centre for Cardiovascular Research, Partner Site Munich, Heart Alliance), 80336 Munich, Germany.

Classifications MeSH