Check that atrial lead!
Check that atrial lead!
Surprising. I think we all believe that lead infections requiring removal would be higher in the TV group. Group of really sick patients. Would like to see the comparison to dialysis patients who didnβt receive an ICD.
Yep. Was the LV ring conductor that was fractured. LV tip was fine. Changed pacing polarity with no issues (yet). Good ol St Jude Optum coated LV lead.
Didnβt do CXR (I donβt think we need to). See my reply to Andy Rudnick about what I did next. Generator change was in 2018.
So I brought the patient into the office and confirmed that the bipolar impedance was >3,000 ohms with no capture at maximal output (confirming a fracture). I then checked the LV tip to RV coil impedance (570 ohms) and the LV ring to RV coil impedance (>3,000 ohms). What is the issue? Next steps?
NYHA class I. EF normalized after CRT. Paced QRS duration with CRT is 140 msec.
Sudden increase in impedance. Did bring them into the office. No noise with pocket manipulation. Would you want to do anything else before discussing extraction and/or reimplantation of a new lead?
Nothing recently. The impedance is persistently >3,000.
#EPeeps - you get a call from your device RN about a patient with a CRT ICD - LV lead impedance on a remote alert is >3,000 ohms and auto threshold is very high. Bipolar lead implanted in 2011. What are your next steps?
Thanks Michael! So glad to be here.
Hi Steven!
For the uninitiated, Dr. Zweibel founded the #EPeeps hashtag, solidifying and consolidating excellent content within our field on Twitter. Welcome to BlueSky. #CardioSky #MedSky
#EPeeps - so happy to be on BlueSky. Hoping we can reproduce what we had on that prior platform before it was ruined by new owner. Missed everyone!