Abstract

The atrial and ventricular pacing threshold development during the first postoperative year was studied in a group of patients receiving DDD pacemakers. Identical carbon-tip endocardial leads were implanted in atrium and ventricle. Atrial and ventricular voltage stimulation thresholds were measured at implantation, and noninvasively at 1 and 12 months thereafter. The atrial amplifier sensitivity required for adequate P wave sensing during follow-up was also determined. The possible influence of a number of factors upon atrial and ventricular threshold evolution was statistically assessed. The threshold data were complete in 57 patients (mean age +/- SD, 65.2 +/- 12.4 years). Thirteen patients had a diagnosis of sinus node disease, whereas 44 had not. Patient age and diagnosis did not significantly influence atrial or ventricular stimulation threshold development. Atrial sensing thresholds were not related to atrial stimulation thresholds during follow-up. Atrial pacing thresholds were higher than ventricular thresholds at pacemaker implantation (P less than 0.00005), but the postoperative threshold rise and thresholds at 1 and 12 months postoperatively did not differ significantly between the atrium and ventricle. The ratio of chronic to acute stimulation thresholds was higher on the ventricular than on the atrial level (0.001 greater than P greater than 0.0005). The chronic atrial threshold showed a logarithmic relation to the threshold at implantation (P = 0.0006); postoperative threshold rise was not a significant determinant of the chronic atrial threshold (P = NS). On the ventricular level, the reverse was seen: The chronic threshold was related to the postoperative threshold rise (P = 0.0015, logarithmic relation), but not to the implantation threshold (P = NS).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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