Optimizing cardiac rehabilitation by pacemaker reprogramming. Can we immediately improve the exercise capacity?

Author:

Caloian Bogdan1,Irimie Diana Andrada1,Gusetu Gabriel Nicolae2,Comsa Dan Horatiu2,Cismaru Gabriel Laurentiu2,Fringu Florina Iulia2,Tomoaia Raluca2,Rosu Radu Ovidiu2,Dadarlat-Pop Alexandra3,Pop Dana2,Zdrenghea Dumitru Tudor2

Affiliation:

1. Cardiology-Rehabilitation Department, Faculty of Medicine, “Iuliu Hatieganu” University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Cluj-Napoca, Cluj, Romania

2. Clinical Rehabilitation Hospital Cluj-Napoca, Cluj, Romania

3. Heart Institute "Niculae Stancioiu", Cluj-Napoca, Romania

Abstract

Background: Previous studies have demonstrated a direct correlation between pacemaker programming mode and exercise capacity on a long-term follow-up. In the present study we aimed to test whether reprogramming of the pacemaker can produce immediate effects on patients' exercise capacity. Methods: The exercise capacity of 33 patients wearing dual-chamber pacemakers was evaluated by cardiopulmonary exercise test at 24-hour intervals in two programming modes: initially in the single-chamber ventricular pacing mode with a fixed 60bpm rate, and in the second phase in dual chamber pacing mode with exercise adaptable rate, up to 130bpm. Results: The maximum O2 consumption (VO2 max: 12.82±2.70 mL/kg/min vs 14.52±3.25 mL/kg/min, p=0.02), the O2 consumption at the time of the anaerobic threshold (10.76±2.25 mL/kg/min vs 12.30±2.84 mL/kg/min, p=0.008), the duration of exercise (456.76±116.85 seconds vs 510.57±129.56 seconds, p=0.04) and the maximum workload (84.39±17.89W vs 96.36±24.09W, p=0.01) were significantly lower when the pacemakers were programmed in the single chamber ventricular fixed-rate pacing mode compared to the dual chamber rate adaptive pacing mode. Conclusion: Cardiac pacemaker reprogramming is able to exert immediate effects on exercise capacity. Dual chamber pacing with adaptable rate during physical exercise is superior to single chamber fixed rate pacing

Publisher

Romanian Association of Balneology

Subject

General Medicine

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