» Articles » PMID: 10773570

Twenty Years Experience with Pediatric Pacing: Epicardial and Transvenous Stimulation

Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective: Permanent cardiac pacing in children and adolescents is rare and often occurs by means of epicardial pacing. Based on two decades of experience, operative and postoperative data of patients with epicardial and transvenous pacing were analyzed retrospectively.

Methods: Between October 1979 and December 1998, 71 patients (mean age, 5.3+/-4.2, range, 1 day-16.2 years; mean body weight, 18+/-12; range, 8-56 kg) underwent permanent pacemaker implantation. Indications were sinus node dysfunction and atrio-ventricular block following surgery for congenital heart disease (69%), or congenital atrioventricular block (31%). Pacing was purely atrial (1.4%), purely ventricular (73%), ventricular with atrial synchronization (5. 6%), or atrioventricular synchronized (20%). Epicardial pacing was established in 49 (69%), transvenous in 22 (31%) patients. Follow-up was 3.4+/-3.8 years (epicardial) and 3.0+/-4.0 years (transvenous).

Results: Epicardial leads were implanted in younger patients (mean age: 4.5 vs. 7.0 years, P<0.05) and preferably after surgery induced atrioventricular block (78 vs. 46%, P<0.05). The youngest patient with transvenous pacing was 1.3 years old (weight, 8.5 kg). At implantation epicardial ventricular stimulation threshold at 1.0 ms was 1.07+/-0.46 vs. 0.53+/-0.31 V (transvenous) (P<0.05). The age-adjusted rate of lead-related reoperations was significantly higher in patients with epicardial leads (P<0.05), mainly due to increasing chronic stimulation thresholds resulting in early battery depletion. In three patients who received steroid-eluting epicardial leads initial low thresholds persisted after five month to one years. In two patients with recurrent epicardial threshold increase, steroid-eluting epicardial leads led to good acute and chronic thresholds after nine to 15 month. Two post-operative death (2.8%) were probably due to a dysfunction of the (epicardial) pacing system.

Conclusions: Transvenous pacing in the pediatric population is associated with a lower acute stimulation threshold and a lower rate of lead-related complications. If epicardial pacing is necessary (e. g. small body weight, special intracardiac anatomy (e.g. Fontan), impossible access to superior caval vein), steroid-eluting leads may be considered.

Citing Articles

Updates in Arrhythmia Management in Adult Congenital Heart Disease.

Small A, Dai M, Halpern D, Tan R J Clin Med. 2024; 13(15).

PMID: 39124581 PMC: 11312906. DOI: 10.3390/jcm13154314.


Effect of Bedside Ultrasound-Guided Versus Fluoroscopy-Guided Transvenous Cardiac Temporary Pacing in Children with Bradyarrhythmia.

Wang Y, Zuo C, Wang X, Xiao Y, Zeng M, Yang Y Pediatr Cardiol. 2024; .

PMID: 39096382 DOI: 10.1007/s00246-024-03610-w.


Age Matters: A Comparative Study of RF Heating of Epicardial and Endocardial Electronic Devices in Pediatric and Adult Phantoms during Cardiothoracic MRI.

Jiang F, Henry K, Bhusal B, Sanpitak P, Webster G, Popescu A Diagnostics (Basel). 2023; 13(17).

PMID: 37685385 PMC: 10486594. DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics13172847.


Epicardial Versus Endocardial Pacing in Paediatric Patients with Atrioventricular Block or Sinus Node Dysfunction: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.

Patsiou V, Haidich A, Baroutidou A, Giannopoulos A, Giannakoulas G Pediatr Cardiol. 2023; 44(8):1641-1648.

PMID: 37480376 PMC: 10520152. DOI: 10.1007/s00246-023-03213-x.


A comparative study of MRI-induced RF heating in pediatric and adult populations with epicardial and endocardial implantable electronic devices.

Jiang F, Bhusal B, Sanpitak P, Webster G, Popescu A, Kim D Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc. 2022; 2022:4014-4017.

PMID: 36086095 PMC: 10848149. DOI: 10.1109/EMBC48229.2022.9871087.