Generalities
ACap Confirm® is an algorithm working in the right atrium that allows an automatic measurement of the atrial pacing threshold, with adaptation of the output amplitude.
- ACap Confirm® is not a beat-by-beat algorithm
- ACap Confirm® uses the morphology of the evoked response to determine whether there is capture or not
- the template is based on loss of capture
- ACap Confirm® requires a bipolar atrial lead
- pacing must occur in bipolar configuration
- evoked response is examined from A-Tip to Can
- back-up pulses are always delivered 30 ms after the test pulse during threshold searches
Setup test and acquisition of the morphology template
The algorithm memorizes loss of capture as a morphology template. If the signal is similar to the template, this corresponds to a loss of capture, otherwise capture is verified. Three pairs of pacing pulses are delivered to test the morphology of the evoked response before every threshold measurement.
Three pairs of pacing pulses are delivered, and Evoked Response (ER) signals are measured:
- Test 1: 3.875V Test Pulse, 5V Back-up Pulse
- Test 2: 0.0V Test Pulse, 5V Back-up Pulse
- Test 3: 0.0V Test Pulse, 5V Back-up Pulse
- ER’s from Test 1 and Test 2 do not correlate
- ER’s from Test 2 and Test 3 correlates
- Tests 1 and 2 show that capture morphology differs from loss of capture
- Tests 2 and 3 show that loss of capture morphology is consistent
The most recently acquired loss of capture signal (Test 3) is combined with the previous 15 templates into one continuously updated running average. The most recent template accounts for 1/16th of the running template.
Kendall Tau Correlation is used to compare a measured ER to the loss of capture
template.
- Kendall Tau Correlation compares pairs of points for “direction” and not amplitude
- if the pair of ER points are heading in the same direction as the corresponding pair of points on the template, the Kendall Tau score goes up
- 25 points are sampled, then paired for scoring
- a score is measured on a scale from 0 to 300
- high score = high correlation between template and ER; diagnosis = Loss of Capture
- low score = low correlation between template and ER; diagnosis = Capture
- a threshold is determined based upon LOC and CAP scores
- scores below the threshold are CAP
- scores above the threshold are LOC
- minimum difference between CAP and LOC scores must be 30
Threshold test
- rate must be <120 bpm
- the threshold test starts 0.5 V above the last measured threshold or 0.5 V below the programmed pulse amplitude if no threshold test has been previously run
- the ER is always evaluated from a first spike of variable amplitude and a second 5 V spike, 30 ms after the first one
- this back-up pulse is systematically delivered 30 ms after every test pulse regardless of CAP or LOC
- every two beats, the amplitude of the first spike is decreased by 0.25 V
- when two losses of capture occur, the pulse amplitude is increased by 0.125 V every two beats until two captures are verified
- If the algorithm detects a loss of capture at 3.875 V or a capture at 0.0 V, Acap Confirm is disabled automatically and the pulse amplitude is reprogrammed at 5 V (high output mode); a new threshold test will be run one hour later
Adjustment of the pulse amplitude
Once the threshold is found, the device sets a new pulse amplitude by adding a security margin depending on the measured pacing threshold. The same output is used until the next scheduled threshold search.
Programmable settings
ACap Confirm® is programmable to three modes: On, Monitor, Off
- On: periodical threshold search, indexed data and amplitude adjustment
- Monitor: periodical threshold search, indexed data but no amplitude adjustment
- Off: no threshold search, no amplitude adjustment
- Search interval: 8h, 24h