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Left ventricular dysfunction after cardiac resynchronization therapy in congenital heart disease patients with a failing systemic right ventricle

Left ventricular dysfunction after cardiac resynchronization therapy in congenital heart disease patients with a failing systemic right ventricle
Left ventricular dysfunction after cardiac resynchronization therapy in congenital heart disease patients with a failing systemic right ventricle
BACKGROUND: Cardiac resynchronization therapy is rapidly emerging as an effective strategy for managing ventricular dysfunction and heart failure associated with congenital heart disease. Indications for therapy, optimal lead placement, and late outcomes are however lacking. METHODS: We present three patients, one with Mustard procedure and two with congenitally corrected transposition of great arteries, who developed subpulmonic ventricular dysfunction 3-6 months after biventricular pacing +/- implantable cardioverter defibrillator implantation, despite initial favorable result of resynchronization therapy. Possible factors for adverse outcome are relatively high pacing rate, unfavorable alteration of torsional contraction, and increased atrioventricular valve regurgitation due to suboptimal placement of larger diameter defibrillation leads. RESULTS: Careful evaluation of patients, particularly indications for therapy, need to be rigorous; assessment of hemodynamic response at the time of implant and appropriate programming may improve the effectiveness of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) in this patient population. CONCLUSION: Our case series emphasizes the need for a registry in the absence of randomized controlled trials, in order to identify patients who benefit most from CRT, and, importantly, recognize subgroups that respond poorly
adult, adverse effects, randomized controlled trials, heart failure, etiology, heart, disease, artificial, ventricular dysfunction, humans, echocardiography, methods, complications, electrocardiography, therapy, right, cardiac pacing, congenital, left, defibrillators, heart defects, physiopathology, male, report, implantable
159-162
Kiesewetter, Christoph
78de3c5c-1a76-4f7b-a66d-ba8e4931f735
Michael, Kevin
526e045e-35e6-42ae-8013-6b26e30340b1
Morgan, John
b9446d5b-771e-4065-a84d-d05050c7bbe4
Veldtman, Gruschen R.
d9b03375-5c07-46b8-9d85-8ac5b0f8e08a
Kiesewetter, Christoph
78de3c5c-1a76-4f7b-a66d-ba8e4931f735
Michael, Kevin
526e045e-35e6-42ae-8013-6b26e30340b1
Morgan, John
b9446d5b-771e-4065-a84d-d05050c7bbe4
Veldtman, Gruschen R.
d9b03375-5c07-46b8-9d85-8ac5b0f8e08a

Kiesewetter, Christoph, Michael, Kevin, Morgan, John and Veldtman, Gruschen R. (2008) Left ventricular dysfunction after cardiac resynchronization therapy in congenital heart disease patients with a failing systemic right ventricle. Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology, 31 (2), 159-162. (doi:10.1111/j.1540-8159.2007.00963.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cardiac resynchronization therapy is rapidly emerging as an effective strategy for managing ventricular dysfunction and heart failure associated with congenital heart disease. Indications for therapy, optimal lead placement, and late outcomes are however lacking. METHODS: We present three patients, one with Mustard procedure and two with congenitally corrected transposition of great arteries, who developed subpulmonic ventricular dysfunction 3-6 months after biventricular pacing +/- implantable cardioverter defibrillator implantation, despite initial favorable result of resynchronization therapy. Possible factors for adverse outcome are relatively high pacing rate, unfavorable alteration of torsional contraction, and increased atrioventricular valve regurgitation due to suboptimal placement of larger diameter defibrillation leads. RESULTS: Careful evaluation of patients, particularly indications for therapy, need to be rigorous; assessment of hemodynamic response at the time of implant and appropriate programming may improve the effectiveness of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) in this patient population. CONCLUSION: Our case series emphasizes the need for a registry in the absence of randomized controlled trials, in order to identify patients who benefit most from CRT, and, importantly, recognize subgroups that respond poorly

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More information

Published date: 2008
Keywords: adult, adverse effects, randomized controlled trials, heart failure, etiology, heart, disease, artificial, ventricular dysfunction, humans, echocardiography, methods, complications, electrocardiography, therapy, right, cardiac pacing, congenital, left, defibrillators, heart defects, physiopathology, male, report, implantable

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Local EPrints ID: 70450
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/70450
PURE UUID: 0007c858-e506-41cf-bec5-ea0bf94e2c22

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Date deposited: 10 Feb 2010
Last modified: 13 Mar 2024 20:03

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Contributors

Author: Christoph Kiesewetter
Author: Kevin Michael
Author: John Morgan
Author: Gruschen R. Veldtman

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