The incidence of appropriate ICD shocks within the first 6 months postimplantation was significantly higher in ChC patients than in CAD patients. ChC patients were younger and more often women than CAD patients.
Chagas' disease is a parasitic affliction, endemic to certain regions of South America, which may lead to a chronic dilated nonischemic cardiomyopathy. Ten Chagasic patients were compared to 18 coronary patients undergoing transvenous ICD implantation for ventricular tachycardia (VT), ventricular fibrillation (VF), or aborted cardiac arrest. Indications for ICD implantation were either drug intolerance or refractoriness, or no inducible tachyarrhythmia at EPS. There were no statistically significant differences between the Chagas and coronary artery disease groups with respect to age (60.2 vs 62.6 yrs), NYHA Class II (50% vs 62%), ejection fraction (31.1% vs 29.7%), and incidence of cardiac arrest (20% vs 33%), respectively. The following ICD implant and long-term follow-up variables were compared between the two groups: pacing threshold (0.94 V vs 0.95 V), defibrillation threshold (19.5 J vs 19.6 J), number of VT episodes (414 vs 435), number of spontaneous VT terminations (86 vs 187), percent efficacy of antitachycardia pacing (93.9% vs 92.1%), and total number of shocks (112 vs 145). These differences were not statistically significant. We conclude that patients with Chagas' disease, compared with coronary artery disease patients, have similar clinical characteristics leading to ICD implantation. Furthermore, no differences were found with respect to ICD and long-term follow-up characteristics between the two groups.
In Latin America, international guidelines for primary prevention ICD implantation are not well followed. The main reason is that cardiologists believe that patients do not meet indication criteria, even though study data confirm that criteria are met. This poses a significant challenge and underlines the importance of continuous and improved medical education.
Thirty-four patients underwent implantation of a third generation ICD, the 4210 ATP, for sudden cardiac death or ventricular tachycardia. This device incorporates significant telemetry logs as well as a detailed analysis of each arrhythmia episode detected. During the period of clinical follow-up, a mean of 12.2 months, a total of 26,569 VT or VF detections were made. The vast majority of these were either due to atrial fibrillation, nonsustained VT, or "noise" detection, and only 6% led to device therapy. ATP was successful in 86.3% of episodes, with 3.5% accelerations and 2.4% failure of ATP trains. The majority of inappropriate therapy episodes were clustered in seven patients, and all were easily diagnosed with the aid of the extensive telemetry logs and sense histories. Of five late deaths, three were from congestive heart failure, one from cerebrovascular accident, and one unknown. These data reveal that this "tiered" therapy noncommitted ICD performs to expectations; the stored data is of significant value in diagnosing the cause of ICD therapy. In addition, ATP is an effective modality for termination of VT.
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