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Automatic Reduction of Stimulus Polarization Artifact for Accurate Evaluation of Ventricular Evoked Responses

  • University of Florida
  • St. Jude Medical, Inc. Sylmar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Scopus citations

Abstract

The ventricular evoked response, the cardmc depolarization generated in response to a pacing stimulus, is potentially useful as a sensorforrate responsive pacing and automatic threshold tracking. It is necessary to minimize the polarization artifact that results from pacing in order to sense cardiac depolarizations from the same electrodes that pace the heart. To accomplish this, a triphasic stimulus waveform consisting of precharge, stimulus, and poslcharge was used. An algorithm was developed that introduced pacing stimuli during the refractory period of sensed beats, when cardiac depolarization could not occur by definition and polarization artifact could be evaluated. Precharge duration was varied until the amplitude of the polarization artifact was small compared to the evoked response. In 18 patients with temporary electrode catheters, polarization artifact was reduced from 6.8 ± 3.4 mV to 1.9 ± 1.1 mV after balancing (P < 0.005). Initial precharge duration was 3200 μsec and the mean final precharge duration was 3551 ± 516 μsec. In 14 patients with permanent bipolar pacing leads, polarization artifact was reduced from 3.2 ± 3.5 mV to 0.7 ± 0.6 mV (P < 0.025). Final precharge duration averaged 3440 ± 310 μsec. Under a wide variety of pacing conditions, this algorithm simply and quickly reduces polarization artifact to a minimum to allow accurate analysis of evoked responses.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)529-537
Number of pages9
JournalPACE - Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology
Volume14
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1991

Keywords

  • evoked potentials
  • pacemaker artifact
  • pacemakers
  • polarization

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