Doppler Echocardiographic Studies in Sequential Atrioventricular Pacing

Abstract
Six patients with sequential atrioventricular pacemakers were studied by Doppler echocardiography. A commercially available continuous wave system (transcutaneous aortovelography) was used and the transducer was placed in the suprasternal notch and angled to obtain peak aortic arch blood flow velocity. Changes in Doppler peak velocity have been previously shown to correlate closely and reliably with changes in hemodynamically measured stroke volume/cardiac output in the same patients following interventions. In all patients, the pacemaker was programmed from DVI mode to VVI (heart rate was kept constant) and then back to DVI, with the Doppler transducer held in a fixed position all the time, and peak velocities measured after the patient had been in any particular mode for at least 1 minute. Five of 6 patients showed reduction in peak velocities ranging from 13-25% (mean 18.4%) when the pacing mode was switched from DVI to VVI. Doppler peak velocity remained unchanged in 1 patient. Doppler echocardiography represents a simple, noninvasive method for estimating increments in stroke volume/cardiac output obtained with sequential AV pacing.