Long‐Term Clinical Experience with the EGM Width Detection Criterion for Differentiation of Supraventricular and Ventricular Tachycardia in Patients with Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators
2000
UNTERBERG, C., et al.: Long-Term Clinical Experience with the EGM Width Detection Criterion for Differentiation of Supraventricular and Ventricular Tachycardia in Patients with Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators. Inappropriate therapy by ICDs due to SVTs is an important problem. A third generation ICD with a new detection criterion (“EGM width criterion”) for differentiation of SVTs and VTs by measuring the width of the intracardiac EGM was studied in 47 patients. A wide EGM was defined as the longest measured EGM plus 4–12 ms (programmed as EGM width threshold). EGM width detection function was programmed to the “Passive” mode so that no therapy was withheld. During a follow-up of 29.9 ± 8.3 (12–45) months, 489 spontaneous episodes were analyzed. SVTs occurred in ten patients with 305 episodes; 301 were correctly classified by use of the new detection criterion. In four patients four episodes were incorrectly detected as wide QRS tachycardias. Thus specificity for SVT was 98.7% (on a per episode basis) and 60% on a per patient basis. Of 184 VTs in 23 patients, 118 episodes were correctly classified (19 patients), however, in 4 patients 66 VTs were falsely detected as SVTs, 62 (94%) of which occurred in 1 patient with complete left BBB and continuously increasing QRS width in 12-lead surface ECGs. Overall sensitivity (on a per episode basis) for VT detection was 64.1% and 96.7% in patients with stable width of the QRS complex in a 12-lead surface ECG. These data show that this criterion is not superior to data on rate dependent detection criteria and furthermore not applicable in patients with complete BBB.
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