Lead alert: right ventricular pacing lead impedance out of range

Tracing
N° 6
Manufacturer Biotronik Device Remote monitoring Field Messages and events
Patient

This 38-year-old man presenting with familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a 33-mm thick septum and episodes of non-sustained ventricular tachycardia, received a Lumos VR-T single chamber defibrillator. He experienced no episode of sustained arrhythmia in the 6 years since the device implantation.

Graph and trace

Telemedicine report

A first alert (red status) was delivered for a <250 Ohms right ventricular pacing lead impedance. A second alert (yellow status) was delivered for episodes classified as ventricular fibrillation. However, the EGM analysis revealed that the episodes were due to oversensing of an extracardiac signal instead of a true arrhythmia.

Comments

This patient presented with episodes diagnosed as non-sustained ventricular fibrillation by the device, with very short ventricular cycles and charge of the capacitors without shock delivered (short episodes of oversensing), associated with a low right ventricular pacing lead impedance, highly suggestive of breakdown of the defibrillation lead insulation. Lead fracture or insulation breakdown are major challenges during the follow-up of defibrillators. They can be the cause of multiple asymptomatic capacitor charges, wasting energy, or of inappropriate shocks poorly tolerated by the patient. In this patient, the expedited diagnosis by telemedicine enabled an early management and prevented the delivery of inappropriate therapies. The patient was rapidly contacted, hospitalised in emergency, and the defibrillator was temporarily deactivated before the extraction of the defective lead and implantation of a new one.

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