학술논문

Single tests of implantable cardioverter defibrillators can be performed in selected patients at a low risk of neuronal damage.
Document Type
Article
Source
Pacing & Clinical Electrophysiology. Feb2021, Vol. 44 Issue 2, p258-265. 8p.
Subject
*ARRHYTHMIA
*ARTERIES
*BIOMARKERS
*BLOOD pressure
*CEREBRAL circulation
*COGNITIVE testing
*ELECTRIC countershock
*IMPLANTABLE cardioverter-defibrillators
*NEURONS
*OXYGEN in the body
*PSYCHOLOGICAL tests
Language
ISSN
0147-8389
Abstract
Background: Defibrillator testing (DFT) is still used in selected patients to ensure adequate therapy. To do so, ventricular fibrillation is induced and terminated by the implanted cardioverter defibrillator (ICD). Studies have shown increases in neuronal damage markers without a measurable clinical effect in patients after defibrillator threshold testing with multiple shocks. Objective: The aim of this study was to measure clinical outcomes, neuronal damage parameters (NSE and S100), and intraoperative cerebral perfusion (Doppler, near infra‐red spectroscopy [NIRS]) in patients undergoing single DFT after transvenous ICD implantation and comparing them to untested patients. Method: We included 23 patients. Nine underwent surgery with a single DFT, 14 were not tested. Cognitive impairment was tested using the Mini‐Mental‐Status Test (MMST) and the DEMTECt 24 h prior and postsurgery. We also measured S100 and Neuron‐Specific Enolase (NSE) at these timepoints. During surgery we measured medial cerebral artery velocity and cerebral tissue oxygen saturation (rSO2). Results: We found no significant differences between the patient groups except for a significant increase in mean arterial blood pressure and an increase in rSO2 after testing. One patient with cerebral vasculopathy had a significant increase in his NSE values without showing clinical symptoms. This patient also had low rSO2 measurements and a decrease in medial cerebral artery velocity after DFT, other than the other patients. Conclusion: Single DFT did not lead to signs of neuronal damage or cognitive impairment except in one case with pre‐existing cerebral vasculopathy. Therefore, our results support the use of DFT in carefully selected patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]