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Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy: Relevance of the Surgical Approach in the Implantation of the Left Ventricular Probe

Completed
Conditions
Cardiac Insufficiency
Interventions
Other: Medical Files data extraction
Registration Number
NCT03083301
Lead Sponsor
Pierre Wauthy
Brief Summary

Heart failure is very common and reaches more than 56 million people worldwide. 17 to 45 percent die in the first year of hospitalization. The most affected populations live in Western countries like Europe or the USA.

It is defined by a set of signs and symptoms such as dyspnea, asthenia, edema or tachycardia but must be objectified, preferably by ultrasound. Its basic treatment is based on a lifestyle improvement and a reduction of the risk factors (hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes, ...), as well as an optimal medical treatment based on ACE inhibitors, B-blockers, ARA2 (Sartans), spironolactone or digoxin.

When the optimal treatment is no longer working and that the cardiac desynchronization is demonstrated, be it atrio-ventricular, inter-ventricular or intra-ventricular, the patient can benefit from a three-probes cardiac resynchronization to resynchronize the two ventricles. The classic approach, performed by a cardiologist, is to perform an endovenous procedure in order to place the 3 probes under local anesthesia.The first one goes in the right atrium, the second one in the right ventricle and the third one goes in the left ventricle. It is the placement of this third one that often causes trouble. It is more difficult to place since it must pass through the coronary sinus, outside of the heart, unlike the first two probes that are placed endocavitary. When the practitioner fails to place the probe correctly or obtains inappropriate levels of detection, stimulation, or impedance thresholds, a cardiac surgeon must intervene and carry out a mini-thoracotomy.

The CHU Brugmann Hospital is in favor of a mixed surgical approach. The probes are placed by a cardiac surgeon, who first starts by a endo-venous placement under local anesthesia. If that approach fails, the local anesthesia can be transformed into general anesthesia at the same operative time and a mini-thoracotomy is performed.

The aim of this study is to evaluate the immediate impact of this surgical management within the CHU Brugmann hospital, in patients suffering from cardiac insufficiency despite proper medication.The hypothesis is that the mixed surgical approach improves the prognosis of cardiac resynchronization.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
155
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patient who underwent cardiac resynchronization within the Brugmann University Hospital from 2003 til July 2016

  • Cardiac insufficiency, whatever the origin, demonstrated by a cardiologist with demonstrated ventricular asynchronism.

    • With left ventricular ejection fraction <35%
    • And / or a left ventricular diastolic diastolic diameter> 55 mm
    • And / or QRS measuring> 130 milli sec
    • And / or left branch block
  • Redo procedure on a pacemaker

Exclusion Criteria

• Change of case on a patient who has already benefited from a triple chamber stimulator

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Cardiac insufficiencyMedical Files data extractionPatients with cardiac insufficiency (i.e in NYHA class III or IV) or refractory to optimal medical treatment (155 patients since 2003) in the Brugmann University Hospital, in the cardiac surgery department
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Demographic data7 years

Demographic data (descriptive analysis)

Risks factors7 years

Descriptive analysis of the risks factors linked to the failure of the procedure

Type of cardiopathy7 years

Type of cardiopathy

QRS interval7 years

QRS interval

PR interval7 years

PR interval

Direct failure rate of the mixed approach7 years

Direct failure rate of the mixed approach

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

CHU Brugmann

🇧🇪

Brussels, Belgium

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