医学
房间隔
心房颤动
心脏病学
内科学
心耳
附属物
窦(植物学)
窦性心律
左心房
解剖
植物
生物
属
作者
Roberto Verlato,Giovanni Luca Botto,Riccardo Massa,Claudia Amellone,Antonello Perucca,Maria Grazia Bongiorni,Emanuele Bertaglia,Vigilio Ziacchi,Marcello Piacenti,Attilio Del Rosso,Giovanni Russo,S. Baccillieri,Pietro Turrini,G. Corbucci
标识
DOI:10.1161/circep.110.957126
摘要
Background— The role of pacing sites and atrial electrophysiology on the progression of atrial fibrillation (AF) to the permanent form in patients with sinus node dysfunction (SND) has never been investigated. The aim of the study was to investigate the relationship between atrial electrophysiology and the efficacy of atrial pacing at the low interatrial septum (IAS) or at the right atrial appendage (RAA) to prevent persistent/permanent AF in patients with SND. Methods and Results— The Electrophysiology-Guided Pacing Site Selection (EPASS) Study was a prospective, controlled, randomized study. Atrial refractoriness, basal and incremental conduction times from the RAA to the coronary sinus ostium were measured before implantation, and the difference (ΔCTos) was calculated. Patients with ΔCTos ≥50 ms (study group) and those with ΔCTos <50 ms (control group) were randomly assigned to RAA or IAS with algorithms for continuous atrial stimulation “on.” The primary end point was time to development of permanent or persistent AF within a 2-year follow-up in the study group, IAS versus RAA. Data were analyzed by intention to treat. One hundred two patients (77±7 years, 44 mol/L) were enrolled, 69 (68%) in the study group and 33 (32%) in the control group. Of these, 97 ended the study, respectively, randomly assigned: 29 IAS versus 36 RAA and 18 IAS versus 14 RAA. After a mean follow-up of 15±7 (median, 17) months, 11 (16.6%) patients in the study group met the primary end point: 2 IAS versus 9 RAA (log rank=3.93, P =0.047). Conclusions— In patients with SND and intra-atrial conduction delay, low IAS pacing was superior to RAA pacing in preventing progression to persistent or permanent AF. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT00239226.
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