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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (dizziness)
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An evaluation was undertaken regarding two female patients suffering from obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, with high and strongly symptomatic gradients, as well as evidencing a resistance to medication with beta-blockers, verapamil and disopyramide when administered in maximal doses. These patients were provided with the implant of a definitive type DDD pacemaker, with an auricular electrocatheter placed on the right auricular appendix, and with a bipolar ventricular catheter placed on the apex of the right ventricle. The generator was programmed with a short AV so as to ensure that the ventricular stimulation would at any given time be the result of the ventricular contraction would be initiated at the apex portion of the right ventricle. With these therapeutics, we observed not only a reduction or even the gradient, but also the complete elimination of the existing symptoms--angor, dyspnea, dizziness, palpitations and fainting--with the resulting normalcy of the quality of life of the patients. All taken into account we are of the opinion that these therapeutics are, in the case of patients suffering from obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a valid alternative for surgical treatment by means of myectomy or myotomy, but without the morbidity and mortality rates presented by such methods.
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PMID:[Acute and chronic sequential atrioventricular pacing in patients with obstructive-type hypertrophic myocardiopathy resistant to medical therapy]. 757 64

We studied 16 patients aged 77-88 years to determine whether elderly patients gain significant benefit from dual-chamber (DDD) compared with single-chamber ventricular demand (VVI) pacing. The study was designed as a double-blind randomized two-period crossover study--each pacing mode was maintained for 7 days. End points included: (i) overall symptoms scores; (ii) exercise tests related to daily activities; and (iii) perceived level of difficulty (Borg score). The mean symptom score in DDD mode was 7.07 (6.38) vs. 12.27 (7.29) in VVI mode (p < 0.006). Dizziness, breathlessness and fatigue were the most noticed symptoms during VVI pacing. One patient dropped out from follow-up and three patients requested early reprogramming, all from VVI mode. Overall, no patient preferred VVI mode, 11 preferred DDD mode and four expressed no preference. There were significant improvements in all objective test performances in DDD mode. Mean (SD) total Borg scores in DDD mode and VVI mode were 36.57 (5.85) and 41.93 (6.49), respectively (p < 0.002). Ventricular demand pacing in elderly patients with complete heart block is associated with higher symptom scores, reduced exercise ability and greater perceived exercise difficulty compared with dual-chamber pacing.
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PMID:DDD vs. VVI pacing in patients aged over 75 years with complete heart block: a double-blind crossover comparison. 820 15

Optimal pacing in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation/flutter following AV node ablation remains to be determined because VVIR pacing cannot restore AV synchronization and conventional DDD(R) pacing cannot properly cope with atrial tachyarrhythmias. The objective of the present investigation was to study the clinical outcome of 16 of these patients who received a new DDDR pacemaker with an automatic mode switch (Thera DR; Medtronic) immediately after AV node ablation. Arrhythmia-related symptoms before ablation were palpitations in 12, dizziness in 10, exercise intolerance in 8, and syncope in 6 patients. Pacing modes at hospital discharge were DDDR (n = 14) and DDD (n = 2) with an activated mode switch in all patients. After 1 month 12 patients were symptom free. Clinical events occurred in 4 patients (palpitations in 2, dizziness in 1, chest pain in 1, and fatigue in 1), which could be relieved in 3 patients. At discharge as well as at the 1-month follow-up, Holter ECG recorded a total of 12 episodes of atrial fibrillation in 5 patients, which were correctly detected by the pacemaker and followed by mode switching. At the 3-month follow-up (n = 14), 12 patients were symptom free and 2 continued to report symptoms which could not be resolved. All patients remained on an automatic mode switch in either the DDDR (n = 12) or DDD (n = 2) mode. There were no hints of inappropriate mode switching or reports of pacemaker syndrome, and there were no new symptoms related to automatic mode switching. The patients studied were highly symptomatic before implantation due to paroxysmal atrial fibrillation/flutter. After the first follow-up, 81% of the patients reported no symptoms. Paroxysmal atrial fibrillation/flutter combined with a high-degree AV-block seems no longer to be a contraindication for AV-synchronous pacing.
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PMID:DDD(R) pacing with automatic mode switch in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation following AV nodal ablation. 919 25

Pacemaker therapy in patients with atrial fibrillation means the best current pacemaker therapy for patients with bradycardias with the aim to avoid the onset of atrial fibrillation and to establish DDD pacing despite of a history of atrial tachyarrhythmias. The newer application of pacing is the suppression of atrial arrhythmias in patients with medical refractory atrial tachyarrhythmias. Patients with slow ventricular rates and permanent atrial fibrillation should receive a VVI-pacemaker, if the bradycardias causes syncope, dizziness or a decrease of their exercise tolerance. In case of chronotropic incompetence the pacemaker should provide rate responsive pacing. Patients with sick sinus syndrome should receive an atrial (AAI) or dual-chamber (DDD) pacemaker, because patients with these in contrast to VVI-pacemakers develop less often atrial fibrillation and subsequent complications such as atrial thromboembolism. A dual-chamber or VDD-pacemaker--the latter connected to a VDD-single-lead--is indicated in patients with advanced AV-block. Atrial fibrillation occurs in 3 to 6% of the patients with no history of arrythmia and is, if pacemakers have no automatic mode switch, an often reason to program the devices to the VVI-pacing mode. Nowadays, most DDD(R)-pacemakers provide an automatic mode switch: During an atrial tachycardia the pacemaker switches to a VVI/VVIR mode and restores the initial DDD(R)-pacing mode with termination of the arrhythmia. In respect to the newer applications, one approach to prevent atrial tachyarrhythmias is permanent atrial pacing. As lower pacing rates of 80 to 90 ppm are usually needed and many patients hardly tolerate these pacing rates, new algorithms are under clinical investigation. Another approach is the simultaneous depolarization of the right and left atrium. Biatrial pacing is performed with one lead in the high right atrium and another lead in the coronary sinus. Another solution is bifocal atrial pacing with leads placed in the high right atrium and in the coronary sinus ostium. One effect of the new pacing techniques is to shorten interatrial conduction times. Therefore, biatrial pacing has become a therapy to prevent atrial arrhythmias deriving from delayed interatrial conduction times. As atrial reentry circuits seem to be important in atrial fibrillation, multisite atrial pacing is also performed in patients with medical refractory paroxysmal atrial fibrillation. Preliminary results suggest a more effective prevention of atrial fibrillation; nevertheless, these techniques should be still restricted to patients enrolled in clinical studies.
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PMID:[Pacemaker therapy in patients with atrial fibrillation]. 969 Jan 13

In 19 patients paced and medicated for bradycardia tachycardia syndrome (BTS), AAIR and DDDR pacing were compared with regard to quality of life (QoL), atrial tachyarrhythmia (AFib), exercise tolerance, and left ventricular (LV)function. Patients had a PQ interval < or = 240 ms during sinus rhythm, no second or third degree AV block, no bundle branch block, or bifascicular block. In DDDR mode, AV delay was optimized using the aortic time velocity integral. After 3 months, QoL was assessed by questionnaires, patients were investigated by 24-hour Holter, cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPX) was performed, and LV function was determined by echocardiography. QoL was similar in all dimensions, except dizziness, showing a significantly lower prevalence in AAIR mode. The incidence of AFib was 12 episodes in 2 patients with AAIR versus 22 episodes in 7 patients with DDDR pacing (P = 0.072). In AAIR mode, 164 events of second and third degree AV block were detected in 7 patients (37%) with pauses between 1 and 4 seconds. During CPX, exercise duration and work load were higher in AAIR than in DDDR mode (423+/-127 vs 402+/-102 s and 103+/-31 vs 96+/-27 Watt, P < 0.05). Oxygen consumption (VO2), was similar in both modes. During echocardiography, only deceleration of early diastolic flow velocity and early diastolic closure rate of the anterior mitral valve leaflet were higher in DDD than in AAI pacing (5.16+/-1.35 vs 3.56+/-0.95 m/s2 and 69.2+/-23 vs 54.1+/-26 mm/s, P < 0.05). As preferred pacing mode, 11 patients chose DDDR, 8 patients chose AAIR. Hence, AAIR and DDDR pacing seem to be equally effective in BTS patients. In view of a considerable rate of high degree AV block during AAIR pacing, DDDR mode should be preferred for safety reasons.
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PMID:AAIR versus DDDR pacing in the bradycardia tachycardia syndrome: a prospective, randomized, double-blind, crossover trial. 1181 26

A 25-year-old male student complained about episodic palpitations, dizziness, nausea and headache 5 years prior to presentation. No otorhinolaryngic, neurologic or gastrointestinal causes were identified. Several ECG recordings revealed sinus node dysfunction with intermittent sinus arrest and AV-nodal escape rhythm. The patient was given a permanent DDD-pacemaker. Six months later, the clinical symptoms were unchanged. During an attack, physical examination revealed paleness, diffuse sweating and an arterial blood pressure of 250/130 mmHg, which decreased to 120/80 mmHg within a few minutes. Abdominal ultrasound and abdominal computed tomographic scan demonstrated the presence of a large (6.4 x 5.5 cm) left-sided adrenal mass. Two 24-h-urinary collections demonstrated elevated noradrenaline (mean 315 micrograms/24 h, normal < 80 micrograms/24 h) and adrenaline (mean 268 micrograms/24 h, normal < 20 mg/24 h) levels. Blood samples, which were drawn during excessive blood pressure rise, revealed elevation of plasma catecholamines (6.793 pg/ml for adrenaline (normal 50-150 pg/ml) and 10.424 pg/ml for noradrenaline (normal 200-500 pg/ml), so that the diagnosis of pheochromocytoma was considered established. The tumor was successfully removed during laparascopic surgery. After surgery, the patient remained well and normotensive. Three months later, several long-term ECG recordings showed sinus arrhythmia with no evidence of sinus arrest or AV-nodal escape rhythm, so that the DDD pacemaker was turned off. This case underlines that sinus node dysfunction with intermittent sinus arrest and AV-nodal escape rhythm is a potential early manifestation of a pheochromocytoma. These changes seem to disappear after successful removal of the tumor.
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PMID:[Sinus node dysfunction with intermittent sinus arrest and AV-nodal escape rhythm as initial manifestation of pheochromocytoma]. 1196 12

The case of a 17-year-old female who had been implanted a dual-chamber DDD pacemaker because of third-degree atrioventricular block is reported. There is a history of continued dizziness and even occasional syncopes. At heart rates of 111/min to 124/min, 24-h Holter electrocardiography revealed isolated missing ventricular beats in an otherwise continuous atrially sensed and triggered, ventricularly paced rhythm. Differential diagnoses of a putative pacemaker dysfunction are presented, comprising 2:1-block at maximum programmed heart rate, intermittent lead fracture, anti-pacemaker-mediated tachycardia algorithm, ventricular oversensing, P wave signal undersensing, and atrial oversensing.
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PMID:Questionable dysfunction of a dual-Chamber pacemaker in a 17-year-old female: differential diagnoses of missing ventricular beats. 1556 53

Atrioventricular (AV) block is rare in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), but it is usually of complete type. A 55-year-old woman had complaints of fatigue, dizziness, and light-headedness, all of a week history. She had been receiving treatment for RA for about six years, and had been on methylprednisolone 5 mg/day for a year. On physical examination, her heart rate was 32 bpm, blood pressure was 160/80 mmHg. She had a grade 1-2/6 apical systolic ejection murmur. The electrocardiogram showed complete AV block. Transthoracic echocardiography showed grade I mitral regurgitation. No rheumatoid nodule was noted on transesophageal echocardiography. Coronary arteries appeared normal on coronary angiography. A temporary pacemaker was implanted in the coronary care unit, after which complete AV block improved to a second-degree Mobitz type II block. Her heart rate was 45 bpm. As no further improvement was observed in the AV block during a 10-day monitoring, she underwent DDD-R permanent pacemaker implantation.
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PMID:[Complete atrioventricular block in a patient with rheumatoid arthritis]. 1876 72

The aim of the study was to assess the situation with implantation of cardiac pacemakers and to critically evaluate the possibility of this method of treatment. The study was conducted from 2001 to 2007. Data on a total of 211 operations were included in the study. There were 121 (57.3%) male patients, mean age 69.7 years, and 90 (42.7%) female patients, mean age 74.5 years. Total number of operations increased from 18 in 2001 to 24 in 2002, 28 in 2003, 38 in 2004, 38 in 2005, 30 in 2006 and 35 in 2007. Primo implantation was carried out in 196 (92.9%) cases. The following types of pacemakers were used: VVI in 79 (40.3%), VVIR in 73 (37.2%), DDD in 7 (3.6%), DDDR in 18 (9.2%), VDD in 17 (8.7%) and AAIR in 2 (1.0%) cases. ECG indication was second degree heart block in 40, third degree heart block in 86, chronic atrial fibrillation with bradyarrhythmia in 57, sick sinus syndrome in 27 cases and trifascicular block in one case. The symptoms included dizziness in 126, syncope in 52, dyspnea in 45, bradycardia in 12, chest pain in 3 and cerebral dysfunction in 2 cases. In conclusion, our patients now receive appropriate treatment within a shorter time, thus reducing pressure upon large cardiac surgery centers. However, efforts should be continuously invested in approaching European standards of artificial pacemaker implantation.
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PMID:The first seven years of implantation of permanent cardiac pacemakers in a small urban community in central Croatia. 1938 70

Exercise-induced atrioventricular (AV) block in patients with normal AV conduction at rest is rare. Herein, we describe the case of a 67-year-old woman with normal 1 : 1 AV conduction at rest, who developed complete AV block during a treadmill test. Our patient complained of effort-related dizziness and dyspnea, which had been ongoing for 3 months. The patient's physical examination was normal. The resting electrocardiogram showed left anterior fascicular block with a PR interval of 0.19 seconds. The echocardiogram was normal except for mild aortic valve regurgitation. During the treadmill test, the patient developed complete AV block at a sinus rate of 90 beats/min, which was followed by 2 : 1 AV block associated with dyspnea and dizziness. The patient's coronary angiogram was normal, and the ergonovine provocation test was negative. Electrophysiological studies demonstrated rate-dependent intranodal AV block. The patient received implantation of a permanent dual chamber (DDD) pacemaker and had no further symptoms during the follow-up period.
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PMID:Exercise-induced intranodal atrioventricular block. 2317 98


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