Abstract

The Micra leadless pacemaker was developed to fit inside the right ventricle, thereby reducing overall complications by 48% compared with a historical control group. The current labeling restricts implants to the femoral approach. In this article we used 3-dimensional computer models of human hearts to demonstrate why implants can be difficult in small patients and how using the jugular approach reduces these difficulties.Methods and Results: Cardiac computed tomography scans were made of 45 pacemaker patients, 26 in the US and 19 from a single center in Japan. Dimensional measurements were taken in all 45 hearts, and these dimensions were compared between patient cohorts and between the Micra delivery tool dimension and patient heart dimensions. Hearts were smaller among patients in the Japanese than US cohort. In addition, the tool dimension exceeded heart dimensions in a larger percentage of hearts from Japanese patients. Three dimensions were identified that most likely limit navigating across the tricuspid valve to the right ventricle in smaller hearts and for which the jugular approach improved navigation. Although the femoral procedure today maintains an excellent safety profile and procedure experience for most global implants, this study provides the rationale as to why the jugular approach may improve the ease of the Micra implant in small hearts, namely by reducing the tortuosity of the navigation across the tricuspid valve.

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