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pacemaker

Indications for Pacemaker Implantation

A permanent pacemaker is implanted to treat bradyarrhythmias or conduction disorders that prevent the heart from maintaining an adequate heart rate or cardiac output. Pacemakers are most commonly required for symptomatic bradycardia, advanced atrioventricular (AV) block, and sinus node dysfunction (SND).

The American College of Cardiology (ACC), American Heart Association (AHA), and Heart Rhythm Society (HRS) provide official guideline-based recommendations for pacemaker implantation.

Primary Reference: ACC/AHA/HRS Guideline for Device-Based Therapy of Cardiac Rhythm Abnormalities

When Pacemakers Are Used

Pacemakers are required when intrinsic cardiac electrical activity is too slow or fails to conduct properly, resulting in:

  • Persistent or intermittent bradycardia
  • AV block impairing atrioventricular conduction
  • Sinus pauses or chronotropic incompetence
  • Symptoms such as syncope, presyncope, fatigue, heart failure, or exercise intolerance

The essential principle:

Is the rhythm disturbance producing symptoms or hemodynamic compromise? If yes, pacing is generally indicated.


I. Pacemaker Indications in Sinus Node Dysfunction (SND)

Sinus node dysfunction includes sinus bradycardia, sinus pauses, sinus arrest, and chronotropic incompetence.

Class I (Definite Indications)

Pacemaker implantation is recommended for:

  • Symptomatic sinus bradycardia
  • Symptomatic chronotropic incompetence
  • Sinus pauses or sinus arrest causing symptoms (or pauses ≥3 seconds while awake)
  • Symptomatic bradycardia caused by medications required for another condition (e.g., beta-blockers)

Class IIa (Reasonable)

  • Minimally symptomatic patients with chronic HR < 40 bpm while awake
  • Unexplained syncope with documented SND on monitoring

Class IIb (May Be Considered)

  • Bradycardia < 40 bpm without clear symptom correlation

Reference: StatPearls – Sinus Node Dysfunction


II. Pacemaker Indications in Atrioventricular (AV) Block

Pacemaker use in AV block is often more straightforward due to the risk of asystole in advanced block.

Class I (Definite Indications)

Permanent pacing is recommended for:

  • Complete (3rd-degree) AV block (symptomatic or not)
  • Mobitz type II AV block
  • High-grade AV block (≥2 consecutive blocked P waves)
  • Symptomatic second-degree AV block (Mobitz I or II)
  • AV block resulting from required medications
  • Persistent AV block after MI, cardiac surgery, or ablation

Class IIa (Reasonable)

  • First-degree AV block with symptoms clearly due to AV delay
  • Asymptomatic Mobitz I AV block with wide QRS (suggesting infranodal disease)
  • Post-MI transient AV block with persistent conduction abnormalities

Class IIb (May Be Considered)

  • First-degree AV block with PR > 300 ms, even without symptoms

Reference: ACC/AHA/HRS – Bradycardia Guidelines Summary


III. Special Clinical Situations

A. Post–Acute Myocardial Infarction (MI)

Pacemaker implantation is indicated for:

  • Persistent Mobitz II or 3rd-degree AV block after anterior MI
  • Symptomatic bradycardia or high-grade block after inferior MI

Reference: AHA STEMI Guidelines


B. Carotid Sinus Hypersensitivity / Neurocardiogenic Syncope

Pacemaker is indicated for:

  • Recurrent syncope with documented cardioinhibitory response
  • Asystole ≥ 3 seconds during carotid sinus massage

C. Congenital Heart Disease

Indications include:

  • Congenital complete heart block
  • Post-surgical AV block
  • Symptomatic bradycardia in complex congenital repairs

D. Atrial Fibrillation with Slow Ventricular Response

Pacemaker indicated when:

  • Symptomatic bradycardia is present
  • AV node ablation is planned (“pace-and-ablate”)

Reference: ACC/AHA/HRS AFib Management Guidelines


IV. Not Indications for Pacemaker (Class III – Harm or No Benefit)

Pacemaker should NOT be implanted for:

  • Asymptomatic sinus bradycardia
  • Nocturnal/sleep-related sinus pauses
  • AV block due to reversible causes (e.g., drug toxicity, Lyme disease, hypothyroidism, hyperkalemia)
  • Expected transient AV block
  • Asymptomatic first-degree AV block
  • Asymptomatic Mobitz I block with narrow QRS complexes

Reference: NICE Guideline – Bradycardia Management


V. Summary Table: Pacemaker Indications

Condition Indication Guideline Class
Symptomatic sinus bradycardia Pacemaker recommended Class I
Symptomatic chronotropic incompetence Recommended Class I
Sinus pauses ≥3 sec with symptoms Recommended Class I
Complete (3rd-degree) AV block Recommended (even without symptoms) Class I
Mobitz II AV block Recommended Class I
High-grade AV block Recommended Class I
Symptomatic Mobitz I block Recommended Class I
Persistent AV block after MI Recommended Class I
First-degree AV block with symptoms Reasonable Class IIa
Mobitz I + wide QRS Reasonable Class IIa
Marked first-degree AV block (PR >300 ms) May be considered Class IIb
Asymptomatic sinus bradycardia Not indicated Class III
Reversible AV block Not indicated Class III

Key Takeaways

  • Pacemakers treat symptomatic bradyarrhythmias or conduction disturbances.
  • Third-degree AV block and Mobitz II are almost always Class I indications.
  • In sinus node dysfunction, symptoms drive pacemaker need.
  • Reversible causes of bradycardia should be corrected before considering pacing.
  • Pacemakers are not indicated for asymptomatic or physiologic bradycardia.
  • Guideline decisions should follow ACC/AHA/HRS recommendations.

pacemaker.txt · Last modified: 2025/11/27 18:17 by dtong

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