Nancy Britton
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania
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Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1998
Eric M. Grubman; Behzad B. Pavri; Tamara Shipman; Nancy Britton; Dusan Z. Kocovic
OBJECTIVES We sought to utilize terminal stored intracardiac electrograms (EGMs) to study the electrophysiologic events that accompany mortality in patients with third-generation implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs). BACKGROUND Despite their ability to effectively terminate ventricular tachyarrhythmias, cardiac mortality in patients with ICDs remains high. The mechanisms and modes of death in these patients are not well understood. METHODS We retrospectively analyzed clinical data and stored EGMs from patients enrolled in the clinical trial of the Ventritex Cadence ICD. Of the 1,729 patients 119 died during 6 years of follow-up. The final recorded EGM was reviewed. Postimplant EGMs as well as 50 control EGMs were used to define normal EGM characteristics. RESULTS There were 36 noncardiac deaths (30%) and 83 cardiac deaths (70%). Of the cardiac deaths, 55 (66%) were nonsudden and 28 (34%) were sudden. When cardiac deaths were analyzed, 46 (55%) had no stored EGMs within 1 h of death, implying that the deaths were not directly related to tachyarrhythmias. In 37 cardiac deaths (18 nonsudden, 19 sudden), stored EGMs were present within 1 h of death. In these 37 deaths, the final EGM recorded was wide (>158 ms) in 33 (89%). Wide EGMs were interpreted as ventricular tachycardia in 27 and ventricular fibrillation in 6. In 13 of the 33 patients (39%) with wide EGMs, therapy was not delivered by the ICD, as it incorrectly detected a spontaneous termination of the arrhythmia. EGMs were significantly wider if recorded within 1 h, as compared with those recorded from 1 to 48 h before death (261+/-124 vs. 181+/-93 ms, p=0.04). CONCLUSIONS Only 37 patients (31%) who died after placement of an ICD had a stored EGM within 1 h of the time of death, suggesting that the majority of deaths (69%) were not the immediate result of a tachyarrhythmia. When EGMs were recorded, they were wide in 89% of patients. These wide EGMs most likely represent intracardiac recordings of electromechanical dissociation. Thus, of the 119 deaths, 112 (94%) were not the immediate result of a tachyarrhythmia.
Heart Rhythm | 2005
Christina Wjasow; Mathias Stoenescu; Mark Heimann; Nancy Britton; Steven Rothman; Dusan Z. Kocovic
Conclusions: Pts receiving ICDs for secondary prevention received more ICD therapy for VT/VF during the entire follow-up as well as during the first year. They also received more cluster shocks as compared to primary prevention pts. The incidence of inappropriate shocks was similar, however primary prevention pts received them sooner. Despite a higher EF, mortality was greater in secondary prevention pts over the follow-up period. Mortality did not differ between the groups in the first year after implantation.
Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2010
Dusan Z. Kocovic; Nancy Britton; Steven A. Rothman; Heiman Mark; Scott Cox
Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2008
Dusan Z. Kocovic; Glen Miske; Nancy Britton; Scott Cox; Mark Heimann
Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2011
Dusan Z. Kocovic; Scott Cox; Nancy Britton; Mark Heimann
Archive | 2010
Eric M. Grubman; Behzad B. Pavri; Tamara Shipman; Nancy Britton
Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2010
Dusan Z. Kocovic; Nancy Britton; Steven A. Rothman; Mark Heiman; Scott Cox
Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2009
Dusan Z. Kocovic; Steven A. Rothman; Nancy Britton; Scott Cox; Simone Musco; Glen Miske; Mark Heimann
Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2009
Dusan Z. Kocovic; Nancy Britton; Mark Heimann; Scott Cox; Steven A. Rothman
Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2008
Dusan Z. Kocovic; Nancy Britton; Scott Cox; Mark Heimann; Glen Miske; Steven A. Rothman