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Cardiovascular and Neurohormonal Effects of Faster Atrial Pacing Rate

19:48 EDT 24th May 2013 | BioPortfolio

Summary

Many patients with heart failure are unable to increase their heart rate appropriately when their body needs increased blood flow. As a result, they may be unable to mobilize excess fluid that their body retains. We hypothesize that we can provide assistance to their body in mobilizing this fluid by artificially increasing their heart rate using a pacemaker. We plan to conduct a prospective clinical trial to evaluate this hypothesis.

We will enroll participants from a pool of patients who already have biventricular pacemakers implanted. We will screen them using a blood test that is a rough estimate of volume overload and then confirm the results of this test with echocardiography, an ultrasound of their heart. Patients who meet the inclusion criteria will be randomly assigned to have their pacemakers adjusted or to have no intervention. They will be unaware of which group they are in.

Following adjustment, they will be monitored for six hours. Prior to the pacemaker adjustment, several tests will be performed to evaluate heart function and the levels of hormones related that are affected by heart failure. These tests will be repeated at the end of the six hour observation period in both groups. Following the second set of tests, patients who had their pacemakers adjusted will be reset to their original settings.

Description

Many patients with heart failure suffer from chronotropic incompetence, an inability to raise their heart rate in response to metabolic demand. Previous studies have shown that brief increases in pacing rates in patients with biventricular pacemakers can improve cardiac contractility. We hypothesize that the benefits of an increased biventricular pacing rate could be sustained and would improve cardiovascular and neurohormonal parameters in patients suffering from volume overload. We intend to prospectively evaluate this hypothesis in a singleblind randomized trial. We will screen 40 patients who have previously implanted biventricular pacemakers and an elevated BNP level and confirm that their wedge pressure is increased by echocardiography. Following enrollment, patients with elevated wedge pressure will be randomly assigned to have their atrial pacing rate increased to 85 beats per minute or to be unchanged. Patients will be unaware of their treatment assignment. They will be observed for six hours in a monitored setting. The primary outcome will be cardiac output, as measured noninvasively by the Innocor and by the NICOM system before and after the observation period. Secondary outcomes will include changes in neurohormonal measures, six-minute walk time and transthoracic impedance as measured by the OptiVol system. If this proof-of-concept study demonstrates a positive effect, future research would evaluate the ability of increased pacing rates to prevent or abort decompensation of CHF.

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Control: Uncontrolled, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment

Conditions

Heart Failure

Intervention

Medtronic CRT (InSync or Concerto), Medtronic CRT (Insync or Concerto)

Location

Columbia University
New York
New York
United States
10032

Status

Not yet recruiting

Source

Columbia University

Results (where available)

View Results

Links

Medical and Biotech [MESH] Definitions

Heart Failure

A heterogeneous condition in which the heart is unable to pump out sufficient blood to meet the metabolic need of the body. Heart failure can be caused by structural defects, functional abnormalities (VENTRICULAR DYSFUNCTION), or a sudden overload beyond its capacity. Chronic heart failure is more common than acute heart failure which results from sudden insult to cardiac function, such as MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION.

Cardiomegaly

Enlargement of the HEART, usually indicated by a cardiothoracic ratio above 0.50. Heart enlargement may involve the right, the left, or both HEART VENTRICLES or HEART ATRIA. Cardiomegaly is a nonspecific symptom seen in patients with chronic systolic heart failure (HEART FAILURE) or several forms of CARDIOMYOPATHIES.

Heart Failure, Diastolic

Heart failure caused by abnormal myocardial relaxation during DIASTOLE leading to defective cardiac filling.

Heart Failure, Systolic

Heart failure caused by abnormal myocardial contraction during SYSTOLE leading to defective cardiac emptying.

Cardiotonic Agents

Agents that have a strengthening effect on the heart or that can increase cardiac output. They may be CARDIAC GLYCOSIDES; SYMPATHOMIMETICS; or other drugs. They are used after MYOCARDIAL INFARCT; CARDIAC SURGICAL PROCEDURES; in SHOCK; or in congestive heart failure (HEART FAILURE).

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