Background: The acute effects of right ventricular apical (RVA) pacing on left atrial (LA) function in patients with normal ejection fraction are not clear.
Methods: A total of 94 patients (age 68.1 ± 11.1 years, 26 men) with implanted RVA-based dual-chamber pacemakers were recruited into this study. Patients who were pacemaker-dependent, in persistent atrial fibrillation or left ventricular ejection fraction <45% were excluded. Echocardiography (iE33, Philips, Andover, MA, USA) was performed during intrinsic ventricular conduction (V-sense) and RVA pacing (V-pace) with 15 minutes between switching modes. The total maximal LA volume (LAV(max)), preatrial contraction volume (LAV(pre)), and minimal volume (LAV(min)) were assessed by area-length method. Peak systolic, early diastolic, and peak late diastolic (atrial contractile) velocity (Sm-la, Em-la, and Am-la) and strain (ɛs-la, ɛe-la, and ɛa-la) were measured by color-coded tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) in four mid-LA walls at apical four- and two-chamber views.
Results: During V-pace, LA volumes increased significantly compared with V-sense (LAV(max): 52.0 ± 18.8 vs 55.2 ± 21.1 mL, P = 0.005; LAV(pre): 39.8 ± 16.4 vs 41.3 ± 16.6 mL, P = 0.014; LAV(min): 27.4 ± 14.0 vs 29.1 ± 15.1 mL, P = 0.001). TDI parameters showed significant reduction in Sm-la and Em-la. Furthermore, ɛs-la, ɛe-la, and ɛa-la decreased significantly, especially in patients with preexisting diastolic dysfunction (all P < 0.01).
Conclusions: RVA pacing acutely induced LA enlargement and impaired atrial contractility. Patients with preexisting diastolic dysfunction may be more vulnerable to develop LA dysfunction and remodeling after acute RVA pacing.
©2012, The Authors. Journal compilation ©2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.