Volume 28, Issue s1 pp. S57-S62

Evaluation of the Atrial Evoked Response for Capture Detection with High-Polarization Leads

JOHANNES SPERZEL

JOHANNES SPERZEL

Kerckhoff-Klinik Bad Nauheim, Germany

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LUDWIG BINNER

LUDWIG BINNER

University Hospital, Ulm, Germany

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GIUSEPPE BORIANI

GIUSEPPE BORIANI

Institute of Cardiology, Bologna, Italy

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MAURO BIFFI

MAURO BIFFI

Institute of Cardiology, Bologna, Italy

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JEFF SNELL

JEFF SNELL

St Jude Medical, Sylmar, CA

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JÖRG SCHEINER

JÖRG SCHEINER

St. Jude Medical GmbH, Eschborn, Germany

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EULJOON PARK

EULJOON PARK

St Jude Medical, Sylmar, CA

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GENE BORNZIN

GENE BORNZIN

St Jude Medical, Sylmar, CA

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First published: 31 January 2005
Citations: 6
Address for reprints: Jeff Snell, St. Jude Medical CRMD, 15900 Valley View Court, Sylmar, CA 91342. Fax: +818-362-4503; e-mail: [email protected]

Supported by grants from St. Jude Medical CRMD, Sylmar, CA, USA.

Abstract

AutoCapture™ based on the evoked response can be confounded by electrode polarization. In this study, polarization was measured in human subjects who had chronic atrial leads. The aim of the study was to determine whether electrode polarization can be measured using a time integral atrial evoked-response integral (AERI) of the negative portion of the atrial paced ER evoked-response signal and to determine whether high-polarization atrial leads unsuitable for AutoCapture™ can be identified a priori. Atrial intracardiac-electrogram (IEGM) signals from 39 patients with implanted pacemakers were recorded and analyzed. The signals were recorded during conventional atrial-threshold searches. A total of 221 atrial-capture thresholds were recorded, ranging from 0.25 to 2.75 V with a mean of 0.79 V. Each evoked response was evaluated using the AERI in a 36 ms window following the 0.4 ms atrial stimulus. The polarization was estimated as a linear function of stimulus voltage using the evoked-response signal integral of captured beats identified on the IEGM. The 221 threshold-search datasets were obtained using leads with eight different electrode materials. Polarization could be measured using AERI as a function of stimulus voltage. Furthermore, this polarization measure can be used to identify high-polarization leads, which are ill suited for the atrial AutoCapture™ algorithm.

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