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Featured researches published by Luc Jordaens.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2010

An Entirely Subcutaneous Implantable Cardioverter–Defibrillator

Gust H. Bardy; W.M. Smith; Margaret Hood; Ian Crozier; Iain Melton; Luc Jordaens; Dominic A.M.J. Theuns; Robert Park; David J. Wright; Derek T. Connelly; Simon P. Fynn; Francis Murgatroyd; Johannes Sperzel; Joerg Neuzner; Stefan G. Spitzer; Andrey V. Ardashev; A. Oduro; Lucas Boersma; Alexander H. Maass; Isabelle C. Van Gelder; Arthur A.M. Wilde; Pascal F.H.M. van Dessel; Reinoud E. Knops; Craig S. Barr; Pierpaolo Lupo; Riccardo Cappato; Andrew A. Grace

BACKGROUND Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs) prevent sudden death from cardiac causes in selected patients but require the use of transvenous lead systems. To eliminate the need for venous access, we designed and tested an entirely subcutaneous ICD system. METHODS First, we conducted two short-term clinical trials to identify a suitable device configuration and assess energy requirements. We evaluated four subcutaneous ICD configurations in 78 patients who were candidates for ICD implantation and subsequently tested the best configuration in 49 additional patients to determine the subcutaneous defibrillation threshold in comparison with that of the standard transvenous ICD. Then we evaluated the long-term use of subcutaneous ICDs in a pilot study, involving 6 patients, which was followed by a trial involving 55 patients. RESULTS The best device configuration consisted of a parasternal electrode and a left lateral thoracic pulse generator. This configuration was as effective as a transvenous ICD for terminating induced ventricular fibrillation, albeit with a significantly higher mean (+/-SD) energy requirement (36.6+/-19.8 J vs. 11.1+/-8.5 J). Among patients who received a permanent subcutaneous ICD, ventricular fibrillation was successfully detected in 100% of 137 induced episodes. Induced ventricular fibrillation was converted twice in 58 of 59 patients (98%) with the delivery of 65-J shocks in two consecutive tests. Clinically significant adverse events included two pocket infections and four lead revisions. After a mean of 10+/-1 months, the device had successfully detected and treated all 12 episodes of spontaneous, sustained ventricular tachyarrhythmia. CONCLUSIONS In small, nonrandomized studies, an entirely subcutaneous ICD consistently detected and converted ventricular fibrillation induced during electrophysiological testing. The device also successfully detected and treated all 12 episodes of spontaneous, sustained ventricular tachyarrhythmia. (ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT00399217 and NCT00853645.)


Circulation | 1998

Atrioverter: An Implantable Device for the Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation

Hein J.J. Wellens; Chu-Pak Lau; Berndt Lüderitz; M. Akhtar; Albert L. Waldo; A J Camm; Carl Timmermans; Hung-Fat Tse; Werner Jung; Luc Jordaens; Gregory M. Ayers

BACKGROUND During atrial fibrillation, electrophysiological changes occur in atrial tissue that favor the maintenance of the arrhythmia and facilitate recurrence after conversion to sinus rhythm. An implantable defibrillator connected to right atrial and coronary sinus defibrillation leads allows prompt restoration of sinus rhythm by a low-energy shock. The safety and efficacy of this system, called the Atrioverter, were evaluated in a prospective, multicenter study. METHODS AND RESULTS The study included 51 patients with recurrent atrial fibrillation who had not responded to antiarrhythmic drugs, were in New York Heart Association Heart failure class I or II, and were at low risk for ventricular arrhythmias. The atrial defibrillation threshold had to be </=240 V during preimplant testing. Atrial fibrillation detection, R-wave shock synchronization, and defibrillation threshold were tested at implantation and during follow-up. Shock termination of spontaneous episodes of atrial fibrillation was performed under physician observation. Results are given after a minimum of 3 months of follow-up. During a follow-up of 72 to 613 days (mean, 259+/-138 days), 96% of 227 spontaneous episodes of atrial fibrillation in 41 patients were successfully converted to sinus rhythm by the Atrioverter. In 27% of episodes, several shocks were required because of early recurrence of atrial fibrillation. Shocks did not induce ventricular arrhythmias. Most patients received antiarrhythmic medication during follow-up. In 4 patients, the Atrioverter was removed: in 1 because of infection, in 1 because of cardiac tamponade, and in 1 because of frequent episodes of atrial fibrillation requiring His bundle ablation. CONCLUSIONS With the Atrioverter, prompt and safe restoration of sinus rhythm is possible in patients with recurrent atrial fibrillation.


Circulation | 2010

Who are the long-QT syndrome patients who receive an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator and what happens to them?: Data from the European Long-QT syndrome implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (LQTS ICD) registry

Peter J. Schwartz; Carla Spazzolini; Silvia G. Priori; Lia Crotti; Alessandro Vicentini; Maurizio Landolina; Maurizio Gasparini; Arthur A.M. Wilde; Reinoud E. Knops; Isabelle Denjoy; Lauri Toivonen; Gerold Mönnig; Majid Al-Fayyadh; Luc Jordaens; Martin Borggrefe; Christina Holmgren; Pedro Brugada; Luc De Roy; Stefan H. Hohnloser; Paul A. Brink

Background— A rapidly growing number of long-QT syndrome (LQTS) patients are being treated with an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD). ICDs may pose problems, especially in the young. We sought to determine the characteristics of the LQTS patients receiving an ICD, the indications, and the aftermath. Methods and Results— The study population included 233 patients. Beginning in 2002, data were collected prospectively. Female patients (77%) and LQT3 patients (22% of genotype positive) were overrepresented; mean QTc was 516±65 milliseconds; mean age at implantation was 30±17 years; and genotype was known in 59% of patients. Unexpectedly, 9% of patients were asymptomatic before implantation. Asymptomatic patients, almost absent among LQT1 and LQT2 patients, represented 45% of LQT3 patients. Patients with cardiac symptoms made up 91% of all study participants, but only 44% had cardiac arrest before ICD implantation. In addition, 41% of patients received an ICD without having first been on LQTS therapy. During follow-up, 4.6±3.2 years, at least 1 appropriate shock was received by 28% of patients, and adverse events occurred in 25%. Appropriate ICD therapies were predicted by age 500 milliseconds, prior cardiac arrest, and cardiac events despite therapy; within 7 years, appropriate shocks occurred in no patients with none of these factors and in 70% of those with all factors. Conclusions— Reflecting previous concepts, ICDs were implanted in some LQTS patients whose high risk now appears questionable. Refined criteria for implantation, reassessment of pros and cons, ICD reprogramming, and consideration for other existing therapeutic options are necessary. # Clinical Perspective {#article-title-18}Background— A rapidly growing number of long-QT syndrome (LQTS) patients are being treated with an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD). ICDs may pose problems, especially in the young. We sought to determine the characteristics of the LQTS patients receiving an ICD, the indications, and the aftermath. Methods and Results— The study population included 233 patients. Beginning in 2002, data were collected prospectively. Female patients (77%) and LQT3 patients (22% of genotype positive) were overrepresented; mean QTc was 516±65 milliseconds; mean age at implantation was 30±17 years; and genotype was known in 59% of patients. Unexpectedly, 9% of patients were asymptomatic before implantation. Asymptomatic patients, almost absent among LQT1 and LQT2 patients, represented 45% of LQT3 patients. Patients with cardiac symptoms made up 91% of all study participants, but only 44% had cardiac arrest before ICD implantation. In addition, 41% of patients received an ICD without having first been on LQTS therapy. During follow-up, 4.6±3.2 years, at least 1 appropriate shock was received by 28% of patients, and adverse events occurred in 25%. Appropriate ICD therapies were predicted by age <20 years at implantation, a QTc >500 milliseconds, prior cardiac arrest, and cardiac events despite therapy; within 7 years, appropriate shocks occurred in no patients with none of these factors and in 70% of those with all factors. Conclusions— Reflecting previous concepts, ICDs were implanted in some LQTS patients whose high risk now appears questionable. Refined criteria for implantation, reassessment of pros and cons, ICD reprogramming, and consideration for other existing therapeutic options are necessary.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1997

Multicenter low energy transvenous atrial defibrillation (XAD) trial results in different subsets of atrial fibrillation

Samuel Lévy; Philippe Ricard; Chu-Pak Lau; Ngai-Sang Lok; A. John Camm; Francis D. Murgatroyd; Luc Jordaens; Lukas Kappenberger; Pedro Brugada; Kenneth L Ripley

OBJECTIVES This prospective, multicenter trial was aimed at defining efficacy and safety of low energy shocks during atrial fibrillation in a diverse cohort of patients. BACKGROUND Experimental studies in sheep and preliminary data in humans have suggested that low energy internal shocks delivered between right atrial and coronary sinus electrode catheters may terminate atrial fibrillation. METHODS Biphasic 3/3-ms R wave synchronous shocks were delivered between two electrode catheters in the right atrium and coronary sinus. The defibrillation protocol started with a test shock of 20 V, and shocks increased in 40-V steps until restoration of sinus rhythm or a maximum of 400 V. Shock delivery was withheld after short RR intervals. In 141 patients with atrial fibrillation, the protocol was carried out under sedation in case the shock was associated with discomfort. The atrial arrhythmia was paroxysmal (< or = 7 days) in 50 patients, chronic (> 30 days) in 53, intermediate (> 7 days, < or = 30 days) in 18 and induced in 20. Underlying heart disease was present in 88 patients (62%). RESULTS Paroxysmal atrial fibrillation was successfully terminated in 46 (92%) of 50 patients, chronic atrial fibrillation in 37 (70%) of 53, intermediate in 16 (89%) of 18 and induced in 16 (80%) of 20. Mean conversion threshold was 1.8 J (213 V) in the induced group, 2.0 J (229 V) in the paroxysmal group, 2.8 J (272 V) in the intermediate group and 3.6 J (311 V) in the chronic group. The conversion voltage was significantly (p < 0.001) higher in the chronic group than in the other groups of atrial fibrillation and increased significantly with the duration of atrial fibrillation and with left atrial size (p < 0.05). Of 1,779 R wave synchronized shocks delivered with a mean (+/-SD) preceding RR interval of 676 +/- 149 ms, no ventricular arrhythmia was induced. The latter may occur after unsynchronized shocks. CONCLUSIONS Low energy transvenous shocks in patients with atrial fibrillation are effective and safe, provided that shocks are properly synchronized to R waves with preceding RR intervals that meet appropriate cycle length criteria. This study provides data that may be useful in the development of an implanted atrial defibrillator.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 2004

Type D personality is associated with increased anxiety and depressive symptoms in patients with an implantable cardioverter defibrillator and their partners

Susanne S. Pedersen; Ron T. van Domburg; Dominic A.M.J. Theuns; Luc Jordaens; Ruud A.M. Erdman

Objective: We investigated the prevalence of anxiety and depressive symptoms in patients with an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) and their partners, and the role of personality factors and social support as determinants of distress. Methods: Of all surviving patients (n = 221) having had an ICD implanted between October 1998 and January 2003, 182 patients and 144 partners completed the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, the Type D Personality Scale, and the Perceived Social Support Scale. Type D personality defines those who tend to experience increased negative distress and who do not express these negative emotions in social interactions. Clinical variables for the patients were obtained from medical records. Results: Thirty-one percent of patients versus 42% of partners suffered from symptoms of anxiety (p = .048); symptoms of anxiety were particularly prevalent in male partners. Twenty-eight vs. 29% suffered from depressive symptoms (p = .901). In patients, Type D personality was independently related to anxiety (OR: 7.03; 95% CI: 2.32–21.32) and depressive symptoms (OR: 7.40; 95% CI: 2.49–21.94) adjusting for all other variables. Underlying cardiac disease pathology did not explain differences in patient distress. In partners, Type D personality was independently associated with increased symptoms of anxiety (OR: 8.77; 95% CI: 3.19–24.14) and depression (OR: 4.40; 95% CI: 1.76–11.01). Conclusion: Partners experienced similar levels of depression but higher levels of anxiety compared with ICD patients. Personality was an important explanatory factor of distress in both ICD patients and their partners. Research is now warranted to investigate the implications of this finding for the clinical course of ICD patients, as Type D personality has been associated with adverse prognosis in patients with coronary artery disease. CAD = coronary artery disease; ICD = implantable cardioverter defibrillator; MI = myocardial infarction.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1998

Variations of autonomic tone preceding onset of atrial fibrillation after coronary artery bypass grafting

Carlo Dimmer; Rene Tavernier; Nikola Gjorgov; Guido Van Nooten; Denis Clement; Luc Jordaens

Assessment of autonomic tone preceding the onset of atrial fibrillation (AF) after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) with heart rate variability was examined in 64 patients scheduled for elective CABG (days 2 to 5). Ninety-six-hour Holter tapes were analyzed in each patient and all events labeled by an experienced technician. The hour preceding AF was divided into 4 quarters (heart rate variability calculated per quarter) and compared with similar time episodes from the group without AF. Twenty-six of 64 patients (40%) had a total of 35 episodes. Only increased age (68+/-5 vs 62+/-9 years) and lower ejection fraction (66+/-16% vs 73+/-8%) were associated with an increased risk for AF. Before onset, a greater number of atrial premature complexes was observed. The standard deviation of all RR intervals (SDNN) showed an increase in the group with AF in the last 15 minutes (significant vs controls and within the AF group). The low-frequency/high-frequency ratio was significantly lower in patients in the first 30 minutes, followed by an increase mainly because the high-frequency spectrum became less important. Thus, initiation of postoperative AF is influenced by autonomic tone variations. A shift in the autonomic balance with a loss of vagal tone and a moderate increase in sympathetic tone are observed before the onset of AF compared with those in controls.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2012

The entirely subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator: initial clinical experience in a large Dutch cohort.

Louise R.A. Olde Nordkamp; Lara Dabiri Abkenari; Lucas Boersma; Alexander H. Maass; Joris R. de Groot; Antonie J.H.H.M. van Oostrom; Dominic A.M.J. Theuns; Luc Jordaens; Arthur A.M. Wilde; Reinoud E. Knops

OBJECTIVES The purpose of the study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the entirely subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (S-ICD). BACKGROUND A new entirely S-ICD has been introduced, that does not require lead placement in or on the heart. The authors report the largest multicenter experience to date with the S-ICD with a minimum of 1-year follow-up in the first 118 Dutch patients who were implanted with this device. METHODS Patients were selected if they had a class I or IIa indication for primary or secondary prevention of sudden cardiac death. All consecutive patients from 4 high-volume centers in the Netherlands with an S-ICD implanted between December 2008 and April 2011 were included. RESULTS A total of 118 patients (75% males, mean age 50 years) received the S-ICD. After 18 months of follow-up, 8 patients experienced 45 successful appropriate shocks (98% first shock conversion efficacy). No sudden deaths occurred. Fifteen patients (13%) received inappropriate shocks, mainly due to T-wave oversensing, which was mostly solved by a software upgrade and changing the sensing vector of the S-ICD. Sixteen patients (14%) experienced complications. Adverse events were more frequent in the first 15 implantations per center compared with subsequent implantations (inappropriate shocks 19% vs. 6.7%, p = 0.03; complications 17% vs. 10%, p = 0.10). CONCLUSIONS This study demonstrates that the S-ICD is effective in terminating ventricular arrhythmias. There is, however, a considerable percentage of ICD related adverse events, which decreases as the therapy evolves and experience increases.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1999

Heart rate dynamics before spontaneous onset of ventricular fibrillation in patients with healed myocardial infarcts

Timo H. Mäkikallio; Juhani Koistinen; Luc Jordaens; Mikko P. Tulppo; Nicholas Wood; Boris Golosarsky; Chung-Kang Peng; Ary L. Goldberger; Heikki V. Huikuri

The traditional methods of analyzing heart rate (HR) variability have failed to predict imminent ventricular fibrillation (VF). We sought to determine whether new methods of analyzing RR interval variability based on nonlinear dynamics and fractal analysis may help to detect subtle abnormalities in RR interval behavior before the onset of life-threatening arrhythmias. RR interval dynamics were analyzed from 24-hour Holter recordings of 15 patients who experienced VF during electrocardiographic recording. Thirty patients without spontaneous or inducible arrhythmia events served as a control group in this retrospective case control study. Conventional time- and frequency-domain measurements, the short-term fractal scaling exponent (alpha) obtained by detrended fluctuation analysis, and the slope (beta) of the power-law regression line (log power - log frequency, 10(-4)-10(-2) Hz) of RR interval dynamics were determined. The short-term correlation exponent alpha of RR intervals (0.64 +/- 0.19 vs 1.05 +/- 0.12; p <0.001) and the power-law slope beta (-1.63 +/- 0.28 vs -1.31 +/- 0.20, p <0.001) were lower in the patients before the onset of VF than in the control patients, but the SD and the low-frequency spectral components of RR intervals did not differ between the groups. The short-term scaling exponent performed better than any other measurement of HR variability in differentiating between the patients with VF and controls. Altered fractal correlation properties of HR behavior precede the spontaneous onset of VF. Dynamic analysis methods of analyzing RR intervals may help to identify abnormalities in HR behavior before VF.


Circulation | 2011

Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia/Cardiomyopathy Pathogenic Desmosome Mutations in Index-Patients Predict Outcome of Family Screening: Dutch Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia/Cardiomyopathy Genotype-Phenotype Follow-Up Study

Moniek G.P.J. Cox; Paul A. van der Zwaag; Christian van der Werf; Jasper J. van der Smagt; Maartje Noorman; Zahir A. Bhuiyan; Ans C.P. Wiesfeld; Paul G.A. Volders; Irene M. van Langen; Douwe E. Atsma; Dennis Dooijes; Arthur van den Wijngaard; Arjan C. Houweling; Jan D. H. Jongbloed; Luc Jordaens; Maarten J. Cramer; Pieter A. Doevendans; Jacques M.T. de Bakker; Arthur A. M. Wilde; J. Peter van Tintelen; Richard N.W. Hauer

Background— Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C) is an autosomal dominant inherited disease with incomplete penetrance and variable expression. Causative mutations in genes encoding 5 desmosomal proteins are found in ≈50% of ARVD/C index patients. Previous genotype-phenotype relation studies involved mainly overt ARVD/C index patients, so follow-up data on relatives are scarce. Methods and Results— One hundred forty-nine ARVD/C index patients (111 male patients; age, 49±13 years) according to 2010 Task Force criteria and 302 relatives from 93 families (282 asymptomatic; 135 male patients; age, 44±13 years) were clinically and genetically characterized. DNA analysis comprised sequencing of plakophilin-2 ( PKP2 ), desmocollin-2, desmoglein-2, desmoplakin, and plakoglobin and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification to identify large deletions in PKP2. Pathogenic mutations were found in 87 index patients (58%), mainly truncating PKP2 mutations, including 3 cases with multiple mutations. Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification revealed 3 PKP2 exon deletions. ARVD/C was diagnosed in 31% of initially asymptomatic mutation-carrying relatives and 5% of initially asymptomatic relatives of index patients without mutation. Prolonged terminal activation duration was observed more than negative T waves in V1 to V3, especially in mutation-carrying relatives <20 years of age. In 45% of screened families, ≥1 affected relatives were identified (90% with mutations). Conclusions— Pathogenic desmosomal gene mutations, mainly truncating PKP2 mutations, underlie ARVD/C in the majority (58%) of Dutch index patients and even 90% of familial cases. Additional multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification analysis contributed to discovering pathogenic mutations underlying ARVD/C. Discovering pathogenic mutations in index patients enables those relatives who have a 6-fold increased risk of ARVD/C diagnosis to be identified. Prolonged terminal activation duration seems to be a first sign of ARVD/C in young asymptomatic relatives. # Clinical Perspective {#article-title-38}


Europace | 2008

One year follow-up after cryoballoon isolation of the pulmonary veins in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation

Yves Van Belle; Petter Janse; Dominic A.M.J. Theuns; Tamas Szili-Torok; Luc Jordaens

Aims Pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) with cryoenergy delivered through a balloon is a new approach in the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF), but long-term follow-up is lacking. The aim of this study was to provide insight in the success rate and the incidence of recurrences. Methods and results Patients with symptomatic AF despite anti-arrhythmic drugs (AADs) were treated with cryoballoon PVI. Daily transtelephonic ECG monitoring, 24 h Holter-ECG, and an arrhythmia-focused questionnaire were used to document AF. One hundred and forty-one patients completed a follow-up of 457 ± 252 days. Before ablation, Holter-ECG showed AF in 45%, including 16% continuous AF throughout the recording. Event recording revealed a median AF burden of 26%. The questionnaire showed a median of weekly AF complaints lasting for hours. All but one patient had successful PVI with a single procedure. After ablation, AF (defined as lasting for more than 30 s) was seen in 11% of Holter-ECGs, with 1% continuous AF. The event recording showed an AF burden of 9%. The median patient reported no more AF-related symptoms. Recurrence during the first 3 months was predictive for later recurrence. A second procedure was performed in 24 patients. The freedom of AF was 59% without AADs after 1,2 procedures. Four right phrenic nerve paralyses occurred, all resolving within 6 months. No PV stenoses were observed. Conclusion Pulmonary vein isolation with a cryothermal balloon is an effective treatment for paroxysmal AF, resulting in a clinical success rate comparable to studies involving radiofrequency ablation. Temporary right phrenic nerve paralysis is the most important complication.

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Tamas Szili-Torok

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Andrew S. Thornton

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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D.A.M.J. Theuns

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Geert-Jan Kimman

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Maximo Rivero-Ayerza

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Susanne S. Pedersen

University of Southern Denmark

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