Discharge Criteria
None
Issues for Referral
May consider referral to regional cardiac arrest center
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Admission to ICU
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Provide targeted temperature management in comatose post arrest patients.
- Expect recurrent cardiac arrest and provide close monitoring and appropriate postresuscitative treatment, which may consist of fluids and vasopressors.
- Get a cardiology consultation to determine if patient is candidate for cardiac catheterization.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Field JM, Hazinski MF, Vanden Hoek TL, et al. 2010 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science.
Circulation.
2010; 122:S640--S656.
- Hallstrom AP, Ornato JP, Weisfeldt M, et al. Public-access defibrillation and survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
N Engl J Med
. 2004;351:637–646.
- Neumar RW, Otto CW, Link MS, et al. Part 8: Adult advanced cardiovascular life support: 2010 American Heart Association guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation and emergency cardiovascular care.
Circulation
. 2010;122:S729--S767.
- Peberdy MA, Callaway CW, Neumar RW, et al. Part 9: Post-Cardiac Arrest Care: 2010 American Heart Association guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation and emergency cardiovascula care.
Circulation
. 2010;122:S768--S786.
- Wik L, Hansen TB, Fylling F, et al. Delaying defibrillation to give basic cardiopulmonary resuscitation to patients with out-of-hospital ventricular fibrillation: A randomized trial.
JAMA
. 2003;289:1389–1395.
CODES
ICD9
427.5 Cardiac arrest
ICD10
I46.9 Cardiac arrest, cause unspecified
CARDIAC PACEMAKERS
Susan P. Torrey
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- A device that uses electrical impulses to contract the heart muscles and provide an adequate pulse
- Methods of cardiac pacing:
- Transcutaneous pacing:
- 2 pads are placed on the chest in the anterior-lateral or anterior-posterior position.
- The pacing current is gradually increased until electrical capture occurs with a pulse.
- Emergency therapy used only until transvenous pacing or another therapy can be applied
- Temporary transvenous pacing:
- A pacemaker wire is placed through central venous access into the right atrium (RA) or right ventricle (RV) and connected to an external generator outside of the body.
- Used as a bridge until a permanent pacemaker can be placed or there is no longer a need for a pacemaker
- Permanent, implanted pacemaker has 3 components:
- A battery-powered energy source:
- Lithium batteries last 7–10 yr
- Generator:
- A sophisticated computer with many programmable parameters
- Leads connected to the RV/RA:
- Typically sense intrinsic electrical activity of the heart and pace the myocardium as needed
- Pacemaker magnet:
- Placed over pacemaker generator
- Converts pacer to asynchronous mode
- Useful if pacer spikes not present on ECG
- A depleted battery will result in decrease in magnet rate by ∼10%.
Pacemaker Terminology
- Fixed mode:
- The pacemaker is set to fire at a set rate regardless of patient’s underlying rhythm.
- Rarely seen
- Demand mode:
- The pacemaker fires only when necessary.
- It senses the underlying rhythm.
- It will only pace if the intrinsic rhythm is absent or less than a set rate.
- Sensing:
- Pacemaker’s ability to determine whether the heart has an intrinsic rhythm
- All pacemakers have a 5-letter code to describe their function.
- For ED purposes, only the 1st 3 letters of the code are necessary:
- 1st letter in code indicates chamber being sensed by pacemaker:
- A: A
tria
- V: V
entricle
- D: D
ual (both chambers)
- 2nd letter in code indicates chamber that can be paced:
- A: A
tria
- V: V
entricle
- D
:
D
ual (both chambers)
- 3rd letter in code describes pacemaker’s response to sensed intrinsic complex:
- T: T
rigger (a sensed beat results in a pacing response as when a sensed atrial beat provokes a subsequent ventricular beat)
- I: I
nhibit (a sensed beat precludes pacemaker function)
- D: D
ual (a pacemaker is capable of both functions)
- O: N
o response
- The most common pacemakers are VVI (single lead) and DDD (two leads).
ETIOLOGY
- Pacemaker-associated infection:
- Infection of pacemaker components often associated with endocarditis
- Staphylococcus epidermidis
and
Staphylococcus aureus
account for >90% of infections.
- Transesophageal echo is the preferred diagnostic method.
- Venous thrombosis:
- Very common (overall incidence 30–50%)
- Symptomatic, acute obstruction is rare (<3%).
- Pulmonary embolism is rare.
- Pacemaker failure to discharge impulse
- Component failure is rare.
- Battery depletion is rare with routine checks; it is not abrupt.
- Lead fracture or disconnection
- Oversensing of muscular activity or external electrical interference
- Pacemaker failure to capture myocardium:
- Lead dislodgment is common.
- Twiddler’s syndrome:
- Unintentional manipulation of pacemaker generator causing lead to be dislodged from myocardium
- Elevated myocardial threshold:
- Change in cardiac (QRS) morphology
- Pacemaker-mediated tachycardia:
- Occurs with dual-chamber pacemakers
- A re-entry rhythm using generator and intrinsic conduction system
- Max. rate typically 140 bpm due to built-in safeguards
- Runaway pacemaker:
- Rare; triggered by battery depletion or component failure
- Often rapid rates (>200 bpm) with hemodynamic compromise
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Pacemaker failure:
- Bradycardia
- Syncope
- Hypotension, progressive to shock and hemodynamic collapse
- Fatigue and weakness
- Dyspnea on exertion or shortness of breath secondary to CHF
- Ischemic chest pain
- Altered level of consciousness
- Pacemaker-induced tachycardia:
- Dyspnea
- Ischemic chest pain
- Lightheadedness
- Syncope
- Pacemaker syndrome:
- Symptoms related to asynchronous chamber contractions (typical with VVI pacer)
- Lightheadedness
- Dyspnea
- Palpitation
- Weakness or exercise intolerance
- Syncope
History
- Date of placement pacemaker
- Compliance with follow-up (battery checks)
- Type of pacemaker
Physical-Exam
General cardiac exam:
- Heart exam for murmurs
- Lung exam for CHF
- Chest wall exam at generator site
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- 12-lead EKG to assess whether there is any obvious evidence of pacemaker failure
- Metabolic workup to determine whether an acquired medical condition led to an elevated myocardial threshold
- EKG with pacer magnet:
- Assess magnet rate.
- Particularly useful when the baseline EKG does not reveal pacer spikes
- The magnet activates asynchronous pacing mode.
- Produces pacer spikes at a preprogrammed rate, regardless of the intrinsic rhythm
- If the magnet rate equals the preprogrammed rate set at implantation, the pacer is okay.
- If the magnet rate is >10% slower than at implantation, the battery is depleted.
- If there are no pacer spikes, there is significant pacemaker malfunction.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Serum potassium
- ABG
- Serum levels of antidysrhythmic drugs
Imaging
CXR:
- Evaluate integrity of pacer lead(s) and position.
- Fractured lead
- Lead dislodgment:
- Perforation through septum
- Tip of lead moved (e.g., in pulmonary artery)
TREATMENT