The present invention relates generally to cardiac pacemaker and defibrillator devices and more specifically to methods for optimising cardiac resynchronization therapy devices.
Implanted pacemakers and intracardiac cardioverter defibrillators (ICD) deliver therapy to patients suffering from various heart-diseases (Clinical Cardiac Pacing and Defibrillation, 2nd edition, Ellenbogen, Kay, Wilkoff, 2000). It is known that the cardiac output depends strongly on the left heart contraction in synchrony with the right heart (see U.S. Pat. No. 6,223,079). Congestive heart failure (CHF) is defined generally as the inability of the heart to deliver enough blood to meet the metabolic demand. Often CHF is caused by electrical conduction defects. The overall result is a reduced blood stroke volume from the left side of the heart. For CHF patients, a permanent pacemaker with electrodes in 3 chambers that are employed to re-synchronize the left and right ventricles contractions is an effective therapy, (“Device Therapy for Congestive Heart Failure”, K. Ellenbogen et al, Elsevier Inc. (USA), 2004). The resynchronization task demands exact pacing management of the heart chambers such that the overall stroke volume is maximized for a given heart rate (HR), where it is known that the main intent is to cause the left ventricle to contract in synchrony with the right ventricle. Clearly, the re-synchronization task is patient-dependent, and with each patient the best combination of pacing time intervals that restore synchrony are changed during the normal daily activities of the patient. For these reasons, next generation cardiac re-synchronization therapy devices are to have online adaptive capabilities in order to adjust to the hemodynamic performance.
The reasons that the currently available cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) devices cannot achieve optimal delivery of CRT are as follows:
1. Programming and troubleshooting CRT device—as of today, optimizing the CRT device using echocardiography is expensive, time consuming and operator dependent. The clinician is required to optimize both the atrioventricular delay (AV delay), and the interventricular delay (VV interval) in order to achieve resynchronization of heart chamber contractions.
2. Consistent Delivery of CRT—There are several reasons why CRT is not delivered consistently, and at times not delivered at all for hours. Two reasons for this are failure to optimise the AV delay and programming of the maximal tracking rate too low.
3. Follow ups—The clinician must perform the complex task of optimization and programming of the CRT device, first at the implantation and then at each follow-up.
4. CRT non-responders—a significant number of patients, about 30%, do not respond to CRT after implantation. The development of good markers that will enable identification of responders to CRT is a major issue due to the complexity of the instrumentation, the need for device implantation, and the medical costs associated with the treatment, (David A. Kaas, “Ventricular Resynchronization: Pathophysiology and Identification of Responders”, Reviews in Cardiovascular Medicine, Vol 4, Suppl2, 2003).
Hayes et al. in “Resynchronization and Defibrillation for Heart Failure, A Practical Approach”, Blackwell Publishing, 2004, suggest that optimal programming of the CRT device may turn “non responders” into “responders” and “responders” to better “responders”. The present invention provides a novel method for optimizing CRT devices which use the data obtained by dynamic active diagnostics, thus enabling a clinician to program the CRT device with the optimal AV and VV intervals obtained during an electrophysiology (EP) study and also to identify responders to CRT.
The present invention provides an electrophysiological (EP) testing system, which enables the pacing of the ventricles, sensing the intracardiac electrograms and monitoring hemodynamic data in real time. An alternative application, is one in which the system of the invention employs an implanted biventricular pacemaker in which both AV delay and the VV interval are device parameters, programmed by a programmer or changed dynamically by an adaptive CRT and CRT-D (CRT device combined with a defibrillator) device, and the hemodynamic performance (such as the stroke volume) is monitored by an implanted sensor or by a non-invasive monitoring appliance.
The present invention provides a method for dynamically diagnosing and optimising CRT (and CRT-D) devices or adaptive CRT (and CRT-D) devices, as described hereinbelow. For each heart rate, rest heart rate and at gradually higher heart rates, the pacing interval of the right and left ventricle are changed systematically. Accordingly, as indicated in
The PRV vs. PLV diagram at maximal stroke volume shows the response of a patient to applied adaptive CRT effected continuously and at all heart rates and includes the information needed in order to optimally program CRT devices or adaptive CRT devices. The simulated results of three cases are shown. Graph 20 of simulated patent I receives simultaneous biventricular pacing at all heart rates, in which the highest stroke volume is obtained with a simultaneous pacing of both ventricles, i.e. VV interval=0, on the diagram diagonal with PRV=PLV. Graph 22 of simulated patent II has maximal stroke volumes when their left ventricle is paced 30 msec before the right ventricle continuously and at all heart rates, shown in the PRV vs. PLV diagram as a shifted curve to the upper part of the diagram above the diagonal line. Graph 24 of simulated patient III has maximal stroke volumes when the left ventricle is paced 30 msec after the right ventricle at all heart rates, shown in the PRV vs. PLV diagram as a shifted curve to the lower part of the diagram below the diagonal line.
Consequent to the above, the PRV vs. PLV diagram at maximal stroke volumes can be used as a dynamic diagnostic tool that presents graphically the characteristics of a heart failure patients response to CRT. It can be used to study the VV interval sign, magnitude and heart rate dependence all presented online in one diagram during a continuous electrophysiology study.
In a co-pending international patent application with the publication number WO 2005/007075, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference, an adaptive CRT device is described (Implanted or an external device) in which the AV delays and the VV intervals are changed dynamically by the implanted device that hence performs dynamic optimization of these important pacing parameters (the AV delay and the VV interval). The change is effected in correspondence with the data derived from the hemodynamic sensor (invasive or non-invasive) in a closed loop using a neural network-learning module. With the adaptive CRT device, the PRV vs. PLV diagram of maximal stroke volume presented here is obtained automatically by the operating device and the diagram can be presented on a graphical interface, which is typically an electronic display device of an external programmer or on the external adaptive CRT device display screen.
The adaptive CRT device (described in the above mentioned co-pending patent application) allows the identification of a responder to CRT during several minutes of continuous biventricular pacing in an electrophysiology test, or when programming an implanted adaptive CRT device. In
Another aspect of the co-pending patent mentioned above is an external device to be used as an active diagnostic tool for optimization of implanted CRT devices. This can be used as a supplementary tool for a CRT device programmer. In accordance with the present invention, the PRV vs. PLV diagram at maximal stroke volumes represented by the responder curve, and the diagram as shown in
In addition to the active diagnostic benefit relating to implanted adaptive CRT devices explained above, which is typically implemented in a procedure room during the device implantation, the use of the PRV vs. PLV diagonal diagram and the responder curve diagram is beneficial in other aspects. It simplifies patients' follow-up routines at hospitals and clinics. It can also be transmitted using an RF communication channel from the implanted device at the patients home to a remote computer and hence to be used as a part of a remote telemedicine monitoring system. Such a monitoring system presents, according to this invention, the measured hemodynamic response to pacing with dynamically optimized AV and VV parameters beat after beat visually on external programmer screen or on a remote computer screen.
With regard to implanted adaptive CRT devices, in addition to monitoring the hemodynamic response to pacing with dynamically optimized AV and VV parameters as explained above, the PRV vs. PLV diagram and responder curve diagram can be used to monitor the pacing consistency and efficacy during various daily actives at rest and during exercise and hence can provide information otherwise unavailable today. The calculated stroke volume extracted from the hemodynamic sensor and the PRV vs. PLV diagram are two examples of analysis and presentation of the hemodynamic response to pacing therapy with dynamically optimized AV and VV parameters delivered by the implanted adaptive CRT device. The present invention is not limited only to these presentations of the adaptive CRT device operation, and any other such presentations of hemodynamic response to pacing with dynamically optimized AV and VV parameters are included in this invention.
AV delay optimization of dual chamber pacemakers and defibrillators are as important clinically as the AV delay optimization of CRT devices. Dual chamber devices use one atrial electrode and one ventricular electrode, and a ventricular pacing occurs after the pre-programmed AV delay measured from a sensed or paced atrial event ends. The AV delay depends on heart rate and on stress conditions and vary from patient to patient and during patients daily activities and therefore a fixed pre-programmed AV delay is a less then optimal solution. Loss of AV synchrony is a major cause for pacemaker syndrome as quoted in Beyerbach D. M. and Cadman C. Oct. 10, 2002, in http://www.emedicine.com/med/topic2919.htm“Pacemaker Syndrome”, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Ellenbogen et al. cited above, focused on clinical utility and proposed that “pacemaker syndrome represents the clinical consequences of AV dyssynchrony or sub-optimal AV synchrony, regardless of the pacing mode.”
The present invention for optimising and monitoring adaptive CRT (and CRT-D) devices is equally applicable to adaptive dual chamber devices with dynamic optimization of the AV delay only according to implantable hemodynamic sensor and using a neural network processor in the same way as performed with adaptive CRT device, described in the co-pending patent application WO 2005/007075.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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165729 | Dec 2006 | IL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IL05/01288 | 12/1/2005 | WO | 00 | 6/12/2007 |