1 / 60

HEART BLOCKS AND CARDIAC PACEMAKERS

HEART BLOCKS AND CARDIAC PACEMAKERS. Arun Abbi Jason Mitchell Jan 21, 2010. OUTLINE. SINUS NODE DYSFUNCTION ATRIOVENTRICULAR BLOCKS INTRODUCTION TO CARDIAC PACEMAKERS INSERTION OF TRANSVENOUS CARDIAC PACEMAKER. HEART BLOCK. RELEVENT ANATOMY

rhian
Download Presentation

HEART BLOCKS AND CARDIAC PACEMAKERS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HEART BLOCKS AND CARDIAC PACEMAKERS Arun Abbi Jason Mitchell Jan 21, 2010

  2. OUTLINE • SINUS NODE DYSFUNCTION • ATRIOVENTRICULAR BLOCKS • INTRODUCTION TO CARDIAC PACEMAKERS • INSERTION OF TRANSVENOUS CARDIAC PACEMAKER

  3. HEART BLOCK • RELEVENT ANATOMY • Conduction: SA > Atrium > AV Node > His > Purkinje Network • AV node highly innervated • Responsive to sympathetic and vagal stimuli • RCA blood supply • His bundle less responsive • Dual blood supply

  4. SINUS NODE DYSFUNCTION • Abnormal sinus impulse formation and propagation • AKA Sick Sinus Syndrome • Umbrella term for: • Sinus bradycardia • Sinus arrest • Sinoatrial exit block • Tachy-brady syndrome

  5. SINUS NODE DYSFUNCTION • ETIOLOGY • Unclear • Fibrosis (most common) • Structural heart disease • Medications • Electrolyte imbalances (HypoK, HypoCa) • Endocrine (HypoTSH, HypoT)

  6. SINUS NODE DYSFUNCTION • SINUS ARREST • Absent sinus P waves > 2 – 3 seconds • Result of absent sinus impulse formation • Duration of pause is not a function of the P-P interval

  7. SINUS NODE DYSFUNCTION • SINOATRIAL EXIT BLOCK • Conduction delay between sinus node and atrium • Three types

  8. SINUS NODE DYSFUNCTION • SINOATRIAL EXIT BLOCK • First Degree • Conduction delay between sinus node and atria • Cannot be identified on ECG • ?Clinical significance

  9. SINUS NODE DYSFUNCTION • SINOATRIAL EXIT BLOCK • Second Degree • Intermittant conduction block • Type I (Wenkebach) – Progressive shortening of P-P intervals – Pause duration less than twice the P interval – Grouped P waves

  10. SINUS NODE DYSFUNCTION • SINOATRIAL EXIT BLOCK • Type II – Pause duration that is a multiple of the P-P interval

  11. SINUS NODE DYSFUNCTION • SINOATRIAL EXIT BLOCK • Third Degree • Complete conduction block from sinus node to atrium • Cannot be distinguished from sinus arrest on ECG • Typically results in an escape rhythm

  12. SINUS NODE DYSFUNCTION • TACHY-BRADY SYNDROME • Bradycardia alternating with brief episodes of SVT • Usually Afib • ???Cause

  13. ATRIOVENTRICULAR BLOCK • ETIOLOGY • Congenital • Acquired – Extensive DDX • Medications • Hyperkalemia (>6.3 mEq/L) • Hypoxia • Increased vagal tone • Ischemia/Infarction (~40%) • Fibrosis (~50%) • Infection/Inflammation • Vascular Disease • Idiopathic • Usually never identified

  14. ATRIOVENTRICULAR BLOCK • FIRST DEGREE AV BLOCK • Prolongation of PR > 200 ms • Location of block • AV node, His bundle, His-Purkinje system • Correlate with QRS complex • Prognosis • Framingham: More likely to develop Afib, require permanent pacemaker, and increased all-cause mortality • Locate source of block • If AV node, generally benign and no further Ix • If infranodal, may require His-bundle electrocardiogram • No specific intervention required for stable 1st degree block

  15. ATRIOVENTRICULAR BLOCK • FIRST DEGREE AV BLOCK

  16. ATRIOVENTRICULAR BLOCK • SECOND DEGREE AV BLOCK • Type I (Wenckebach/Mobitz I) - Normal • Gradual prolongation of the PR interval followed by dropped QRS • Atrial impulses reach AV node while it is partially refractory • Location usually the AV node

  17. ATRIOVENTRICULAR BLOCK • SECOND DEGREE AV BLOCK • Type II – Never normal • PR interval constant • Usually a result of underlying structural disease • Location typically His-Purkinje system • High Grade Second Degree • 2 or more consecutively blocked P waves

  18. ATRIOVENTRICULAR BLOCK • SECOND DEGREE BLOCK • Different sites of involvement/prognoses • Type I: Generally involves AV node and is benign • Type II: Almost always infranodal and may progress to 3rd degree (slow unreliable escape) • Difficult to distinguish type in 2:1 conduction block

  19. ATRIOVENTRICULAR BLOCK • THIRD DEGREE BLOCK • Complete AV node failure to conduct • Block may be anywhere in conduction system • Constant P-P and R-R intervals but no relationship • Variable PR intervals, Atrial HR > Ventricular HR • May be hemodynamically unstable • Slow heart rate may produce Torsade , especially in women

  20. HEART BLOCK • ECG PRACTICE

  21. ECG 1

  22. SSS (Tachy-Brady)

  23. ECG 2

  24. Type II Second Degree AV Block

  25. ECG 3

  26. Sinus Arrest

  27. ECG 4

  28. 3rd Degree AV Block

  29. ECG 5

  30. Type II Second Degree SA Node Exit Block

  31. ECG 6

  32. First Degree AV Block

  33. ECG 7

  34. Type 1 Second Degree AV Block

  35. HEART BLOCK • INITIAL ASSESSMENT • Hemodynamic Instability • Fatigue, Dizziness, NV, Diaphoresis • Hypotension • Syncope • Dyspnea • Chest Pain • ACLS Guidelines for Symptomatic Bradycardia • Medications • Β- Blockers • Ca2+ Channel Blockers • Digitalis • Amiodarone

  36. HEART BLOCK • INITIAL ASSESSMENT • Investigations • Stabilize first! • ECG • Bloodwork • Electrolytes • Dig level • Troponin

  37. HEART BLOCK • MANAGEMENT • O2, IV, Monitors • Transcutaneous pacing • Transvenous pacing • > 30 minutes transcutaneous pacing • Unable to obtain capture • Consider atropine • Consider catecholamines (be cautious)

  38. HEART BLOCK • CARDIOLOGY CONSULTATION • Outpatient • New, asymptomatic Type I 2nd Degree (while awake) • Inpatient • Any symptomatic block • New, asymptomatic Type II 2nd Degree • Asymptomatic 3rd Degree • Concomitant MI/Ischemic symptoms • High Grade AV Block

  39. CARDIAC PACING • INDICATIONS • Temporary • Any symptomatic AV block • Asymptomatic, but associated with Torsade • Permanent • ACC/AHA/HRS 2008 Guidelines: • Divided into Class Based Recommendations

  40. CARDIAC PACING

  41. CARDIAC PACING • INDICATIONS AV Block • Class I • 2nd and 3rd Degree • Bradycardia with symptoms (C) • Associated arrhythmias and medications that produce symptomatic bradycardia (C) • Asymptomatic, but asystole >3 sec or escape < 40 bpm or wide QRS escape or Afib and bradycardia with systole >5 seconds (C) • After ablation of AV node or unresolving post-op block (C) • Associated with MD, Kearns-Sayre syndrome, Erb dystrophy (B) • Associated with exercise w/o MI (B)

  42. CARDIAC PACING • INDICATIONS AV Block • Class IIa • Asymptomatic persistent 3rd degree with escape > 40 (C) • Asymptomatic 2nd degree with intra or infra-Hisian block (B) • Symptomatic 1st or 2nd degree block (B) • Asymptomatic 2nd degree block with narrow QRS (B) • Class IIb • 1st or 2nd degree with MD, Erb dystrophy, peroneal muscular atrophy +/- symptoms (B) • AV block in setting of drug toxicity when block expected to recur (B)

  43. CARDIAC PACING • INDICATIONS AV Block • Class III • Not indicated for asymptomatic 1st Degree (B) • Not indicated for asymptomatic Mobitz I with block at AV node (C) • Not indicated for AV block that is expected to resolve and unlikely to recur (drug toxicity, Lyme disease, transient increased vagal tone) (B) • Also not indicated in: • PEA Arrest • Traumatic cardiac arrest

  44. Some Things Just Won’t Work

  45. CARDIAC PACING • PACING MODES • 5 Position Nomenclature • First 3 Positions most common in pacemaker description • Position I: Chamber being paced • Atrium (A), Ventricle (V), Both (D), None (O) • Position II: Chamber being sensed • Atrium (A), Ventricle (V), Both (D), None (O) • Position III: Pacemaker’s response to sensing • Triggers (T), Inhibits (I), Both (D), None (O)

  46. CARDIAC PACING • PACING MODES • Position IV: Programmability and Rate Control • Hierarchical • Rate Modulation (R), Communicating (C), Programmable (P), (O) • Position V: Antitachydysrrhythmia Function • Pacing (P), Shocking (S), Both (D)

  47. CARDIAC PACING • PACING MODES • Most pacemakers encountered are: • AAIR – Useful for sinus node dysfunction with intact AV node • VVIR – Useful for chronically ineffective atria (AF, AFlutter) • DDD – Most common. Preserves AV synchrony • Reduces risk of AF, reduces signs/symptoms HF, improves QOL • No significant mortality benefit over single-chamber pacing

  48. CARDIAC PACING • ECG MANIFESTATIONS • Depends on Pacing Mode • Atrial Pacing • Small pacemaker spike prior to P wave with normal morphology • Ventricular Pacing • LBBB-like and prolonged, inverted QRS (V5/6) and LAD

  49. CARDIAC PACING

  50. CARDIAC PACING

More Related