Dual lead pacemaker replaced with CRT pacemaker

I wonder if anyone else has had the same experience as me? I would like to hear from you. In January due to a slow heartbeat (36-40) beats per minute I had a dual lead pacemaker implanted as emergency surgery. All was well until May when I collapsed at home. My pulse had risen,so I went to A and E and I was taken to Cardiology. It was discovered that the left side of my heart was out of synchronisation with the right. I now had LVSD and RWMA. I was also told I had heart failure. 

I was then given a new pacemaker (CRT ) with 3 leads.Two months later after a few problems getting used to medication and some odd pains,things seem all right. I am due an echocardiogram.     Has this happened to anyone else? I would love to find out about someone else’s experience. 

 

 

 


2 Comments

CRT

by AgentX86 - 2020-08-05 16:10:00

That's exactly why CRT pacemakers exist.  Some with RV only pacing develop "Pacemaker Induced Cardiomyopathy". You are a classical case of PIC. A CRT pacemaker or a pacemaker with the RV lead in the bundle of His are the fixes and it's usually effective.

I have also have a CRT pacemaker but without the atrial lead (so only two leads). Instead of the problem being left-right dyssynchrony, my problem is AV dyssynchrony. My atria beat so fast and so irregularly that the whole oint is to short them out and drive the ventricles directly.

CRT

by Aberdeen - 2020-08-05 17:03:46

Both my pacemakers were done as emergencies so you don’t sit down with a cardiologist and discuss it at length. I only heard of His bundle pacing through pacemaker club discussion. When I had my first pacemaker I looked online but didn’t find anything about the problem that lead to a CRT pacemaker 4 months later.

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