Cause:Digoxin, ASHD, congenital, granulomatous disease, metastatic calcification (Nejm 1971;284:1252)
Pathophys:Congenital is associated w maternal autoantibody disease (SLE, Sjögren's, etc), w anti-SSA (Ro antibodies) (Ann IM 1994;13:544)
Sx:
1st-degree heart block usually causes no sx
2nd-degree may cause dizziness or dyspnea
3rd-degree may cause syncope, especially on standing
Si:
1st-degree heart block = PR >0.22 sec
2nd-degree = some unconducted P waves
3rd-degree = no relationship between Ps and QRSs
r/o: Lyme disease if from endemic area, even if no other sx, w serology, rx with antibiotics and temporary not permanent pacer (Ann IM 1989;110:339)
Athletes' arrhythmia's (Sports Med 1998;25:139), eg, 1st- and 2nd-degree (Mobitz I) heart blocks, sinus bradycardia, junctional rhythms; all from incr vagal tone, all go away w exercise and deconditioning
Lab:
Noninv:EKG; Holter monitor may still miss a majority of intermittent heart blocks (Nejm 1989;321:1703)
Rx: 1st degree may not need rx; 2nd and 3rd degree: isoproterenol iv or sl, atropine iv, theophylline 100 mg/min iv up to 250 mg (Ann IM 1995;123:509), or external pacer, until can get transvenous pacemaker
Transvenous pacemaker, temporary 1st, then permanent unless inferior MI, which will usually reverse spontaneously. Prophylactic pacers in bifascicular blocks only if 2 or more syncopes and even then questionable (Nejm 1982;307:137, 180). Placement with EKG guidance, sample leads (Nejm 1972;287:651). Coronary sinus placement ok for temporary; tip is seen posteriorly on lateral chest xray.
Permanent pacemaker: (rvJama 2002;287:1848; Ann IM 2001;134:1130; Nejm 1996;334:89; Mod Concepts Cardiovasc Dis 1991;60:31); dual and triple (RA, RV, LV) chamber physiologic types more expensive, use when need atrial kick?, in sick sinus syndrome (Nejm 2002;346:1854), may decr later Afib incidence (Nejm 2000;342:1385) but much dispute about what is best (Nejm 2005;353:145, 202) especially in elderly Table 2.5
Chamber Paced | Chamber Sensed | Sensing Mode of Response |
---|---|---|
Ventricle | V | Triggered |
Atrium | A | Inhibited |
Dual | D | D |
0 (none) | 0 (none) |
R added to designation if rate adaptive capability present. Thus a VVI pacer paces the ventricle, and senses ventricular beats by inhibiting the next paced beat.