Abstract
Some implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICD) are able to monitor intrathoracic impedance to detect pulmonary fluid overload. This is achieved by measuring impedance between the ICD case and the right ventricular (RV) lead. We hypothesized that the measured impedance would rise with improvement in left ventricular (LV) volumes during cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT), and that such impedance changes would be more apparent when measured with an alternative pacing vector. We analyzed echocardiographic and impedance data from heart failure patients implanted with a CRT-ICD capable of intrathoracic impedance measurement for fluid accumulation diagnosis, and LV pacing impedance recording for lead integrity monitoring. In 127 out of 170 patients that received de novo CRT implantation, the LV end-systolic volume (LVESV) decreased at 6-month follow-up (LVESV at 6 month-LVESV at baseline <0: group A). For the remaining 43 patients (group B) the change was > or = 0. Despite comparable values at baseline (P = 0.262), the impedances of groups A and B gradually diverged soon after the implant, resulting in significant difference between the two groups at the 6-month visit (P = 0.001). The changes in LV dimensions produced larger differences between groups in the impedance measured between the LV and the RV leads (P < 0.001). The regression analysis demonstrated an inverse correlation between paired changes of volume and intrathoracic impedance. Higher correlation coefficient was obtained using the LV-to-RV measurement vector (r =-0.635, P < 0.001). The changes in ICD-measured impedance seem associated with the LV volume changes induced by CRT. Specifically, the LV-to-RV impedance estimations seem to better correlate with paired changes of ventricular volumes.
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