Litcius/Paper detail

Adverse effects of right ventricular pacing on cardiac function: prevalence, prevention and treatment with physiologic pacing

Tasneem Z. Naqvi, Chieh‐Ju Chao

2021Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine64 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Right ventricular (RV) pacing is the main treatment modality for patients with advanced atrioventricular (AV) block. Chronic RV pacing can cause cardiac systolic dysfunction and heart failure (HF). In this review, we discuss studies that have shown deleterious effects of chronic RV pacing on systolic cardiac function causing pacing-induced cardiomyopathy (PiCM), heart failure (HF), HF hospitalization, atrial fibrillation (AF) and cardiac mortality. RV apical pacing is the most widely used and studied. Adverse effects of RV pacing appear to be directly related to pacing burden and are worse in patients with pre-existing left ventricular (LV) dysfunction. Chronic RV pacing is also associated with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Mechanisms, risk factors, clinical and echocardiographic features, and strategies to minimize RV pacing-induced cardiac dysfunction are discussed in light of the latest data. Studies on biventricular (Bi-V) pacing upgrade in patients who develop RV PiCM, use of alternate RV pacing sites, de novo Bi-V pacing, and physiologic pacing using HIS bundle pacing (HBP) and left bundle area (LBBA) pacing in patients with an anticipated high RV pacing burden are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCardiologyInternal medicineHeart failureCardiac resynchronization therapyEjection fractionCardiac pacingAtrial fibrillationAtrioventricular blockCardiomyopathyVentricular dyssynchronyCardiac function curveVentricular pacingCardiac pacing and defibrillation studiesCardiac Arrhythmias and TreatmentsCardiac Structural Anomalies and Repair