Objective: Pacing in a univentricular circulation has been associated with worsened outcomes. We investigated the long-term outcomes of pacing in children with a univentricular circulation compared to a complex biventricular circulation. We also identified predictors of adverse outcomes.Methods: A retrospective study of all children with major congenital heart disease who underwent pacemaker implantation under the age of 18 years between November 1994 and October 2017.Results: Eighty-nine patients were included; 19 with a univentricular and 70 with a complex biventricular circulation. A total of 96% of pacemaker systems were epicardial. Median follow up was 8.3 years. The incidence of adverse outcome was similar between the two groups. Five (5.6%) patients died and two (2.2%) underwent heart transplantation. Most adverse events occurred within the first 8 years after pacemaker implantation. Univariate analysis identified five predictors of adverse outcomes in the patients in the biventricular but none in the univentricular group. The predictors of adverse outcome in the biventricular circulation were a right morphologic ventricle as the systemic ventricle, age at first congenital heart disease (CHD) operation, number of CHD operations, and female gender. The nonapical lead position was associated with a much higher risk of an adverse outcome.
Conclusions:Children with a pacemaker and a complex biventricular circulation have similar survival to the ones with a pacemaker and a univentricular circulation. The only modifiable predictor was the epicardial lead position on the paced ventricle, emphasizing the importance of apical placement of the ventricular lead.
Paediatric atrial fibrillation (AF) is an infrequent entity in the absence of congenital heart disease as children are unlikely to have the structural and functional changes in their myocardium to sustain the arrhythmia. Any child presenting with this arrhythmia needs to be carefully evaluated for concealed cardiac pathology such as cardiomyopathy or inherited arrhythmia syndromes. AF leading to a haemodynamically unstable patient is rare and should prompt synchronised cardioversion, while stable patients can be discussed with a paediatric cardiologist. Tachycardia‐induced cardiomyopathy and thromboembolism are possible complications of sustained AF and anticoagulation is usually indicated to prevent the latter. Risk of AF increases with age and body mass index. Obesity and athletics are known risk factors and recurrence can be seen even in the absence of any identifiable underlying pathology.
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