1% pacing only - removal of PM ?

Hello! 

Our child got her PM 2 years ago after syncopes and faintings. 11 seconds pauses at night.

Complete heart block with unclear cause. Never any heart issues before. Meanwile doctors believe it was caused by mild Covid or another virus and it might be recovered.

Since it was implantated it always only had 1% performance. The 1% can result from the daily self checks or it can be that the PM has to do its job, but very seldomly. Nobody could tell us so far if the pm is still necessary. I wonder how we can find that out.

She is now 8 years old and the battery will still last many years. The cardiologist said it would get more and more difficult to remove the wires the longer they are in. But risks to remove it are higher than to keep it.

If the PM is not necessary then I don't want her to have it all her life. On the other hand the PM is not disturbing so much, apart from regular doc visits. 

Have there been any similar cases here?

Thanks!


5 Comments

What a dilemma

by Lavender - 2022-12-28 09:49:12

It would be nice if there was a definite course of action given to you by a trusted pediatric specialist.  As a parent, having to seek out opinions from nonprofessionals, you must be in a quandry. 
 

I wonder if having your child wear a longer term heart monitor would help. Perhaps that gathering of more information can help with the decision. 
 

I have third degree heart block that led to fainting episodes and a pacemaker. I was told it's progressive and doesn't heal. But I am older. 
 

If risks are higher to remove it, I would leave well enough alone. Many folks have had pacemakers since they were children and live good lives. 

1% pacing

by Penguin - 2022-12-28 09:50:16

Hi, 

There is a charity here in the UK which specialises in syncope disorders called Stars.  The founder had a child who suffered syncope attacks.  https://heartrhythmalliance.org/stars/uk/

They joined up with the Arrythmia Alliance some years ago and they may be an excellent source of advice for you as they will have other parents as members.  

Best wishes

1% pacing is not insignificant

by Gemita - 2022-12-28 10:35:53

You have a perfectly good device to protect your little girl.  A pacemaker was clearly indicated and may still be necessary. Even less than 1% pacing may still be reason to keep the pacemaker if your little girl continues to have significant pausing at night.  There is no way of knowing if and when the pacemaker will be required.  I wouldn’t risk removing the device and leads and triggering any adverse responses from your little girl’s heart which is something that could well happen too.  There was a risk in implanting and there is certainly going to be a risk in explanting.

If by the time of battery replacement you find that your little girl has had no further episodes of fainting or long pauses at night, then you may wish to re-visit this decision, but for the moment, in my opinion, it might be best to leave well alone?  

The 1%

by Lavender - 2022-12-28 10:43:38

As Gemita says, it may be significant even at one percent. 
 

I initially fainted for only a brief moment and the first couple times was only out for seconds, even conscious before I hit the ground. Over six months, the fainting was increasing to once or twice a month. The last two fainting spells were near deadly as I actually had near death experiences both times. The last event, I was wearing a heart monitor. I was out for 33 seconds and my boyfriend inadvertently restarted my heart by punching me in the back thinking I was choking when he was actually hearing a death rattle sound. 
 

I have a rare arrhythmia called ventricular standstill. It's hard to catch on a monitor. All EKGS were normal as was the stress test and two echocardiograms. When you need a pacemaker, you need it. It can be unpredictable. 

1%

by Tracey_E - 2022-12-29 10:19:02

She definitely does not have 3rd degree block. If she did she'd be pacing nearly every beat. Infection can cause that so it's possible she healed.

The pacer kicking in for 11 seconds at a time is going to statistically show up as <1%. However, that 11 seconds is the difference between passing out and not. 

I assume her pacer is abdominal for now? When she's grown enough to move it to the chest would be the time to make a decision. Leads run to the abdomen aren't used later anyway. If they decided to not replace it, be very very sure she doesn't have those short eposides of it kicking in for just a few seconds. 

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