The effect of His bundle pacing vs conventional biventricular pacing on repolarisation in patient’s with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction and left bundle branch block?

Introduction: Left bundle branch block (LBBB) is associated with an increased risk of ventricular arrhythmia. Biventricular pacing (BVP) improves symptoms, systolic left ventricular function and mortality in heart failure with LBBB, but can be pro-arrhythmic. His bundle pacing (HBP) can overcome LBB...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of arrhythmia & electrophysiology 2022-01, Vol.8, p.24
Hauptverfasser: Samways, J W, Arnold, AD, Shun-Shin, MJ, Ali, N, Cheng, T, Howard, J P, Keene, D, Ng, F S, Tanner, M, Lim, P B, Linton, NW F, Peters, N S, Kanagaratnam, P, Francis, D P, Whinnett, ZI
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction: Left bundle branch block (LBBB) is associated with an increased risk of ventricular arrhythmia. Biventricular pacing (BVP) improves symptoms, systolic left ventricular function and mortality in heart failure with LBBB, but can be pro-arrhythmic. His bundle pacing (HBP) can overcome LBBB to produce more synchronous ventricular activation than BVP, but it is not known how ventricular repolarisation heterogeneity is affected, which is important in arrhythmogenesis. We set to out to measure the dispersion of repolarisation and activation recovery-interval (ARI, a surrogate for action potential duration) in narrow QRS, LBBB, BVP and HBP. Methods: Patients were recruited into two groups. In the first group, patients with heart failure and LBBB scheduled to undergo clinically indicated BVP implant procedures were recruited. They underwent temporary HBP to attempt reverse LBBB during the BVP procedure. If HBP shortened activation time by ≥10 ms, patients were included (HBP cardiac resynchronisation therapy [CRT]). In the second group patients with normal, narrow QRS were recruited. Non-invasive electrocardiographic imaging was used to measure the following parameters in narrow QRS, LBBB, BVP and HBP: left ventricular activation time, left ventricular repolarisation time dispersion and left ventricular ARI dispersion. Results: A total of 21 patients in whom HBP shortened LV activation time by >10 ms and an equal number of individuals with narrow intrinsic QRS were recruited. LV repolarisation dispersion was reduced by HBP-CRT (-42.0 ms, 95% confidence interval (CI) -52.3 to -31.7; p
ISSN:2058-3869
2058-3877