Pacing channel isolation in multi-site cardiac pacing systems

Surgery: light – thermal – and electrical application – Light – thermal – and electrical application – Electrical therapeutic systems

Reexamination Certificate

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Reexamination Certificate

active

06711437

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention pertains to cardiac pacing systems for providing multi-site pacing in a single heart chamber or multi-chamber pacing including AV sequential pacing and sensing in at least one upper and one lower heart chamber and/or bi-atrial pacing or bi-ventricular pacing involving pacing and sensing in two, three, or four heart chambers and particularly to employing miniaturized electrical isolation circuitry at the inputs of least one of the sense amplifiers associated with a site or heart chamber to improve the sensing of cardiac depolarizations following delivery of a pacing pulse at another site or heart chamber.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The cardiovascular system provides oxygenated blood to various structures of the body. In a normally functioning heart, the body's demand for oxygenated blood varies, and the heart responds by increasing or decreasing its rate and force of contraction to meet the demand. An electrical signal generated by the sinus node in the upper right atrial wall near the base of the heart is conducted through the upper heart chambers, i.e., the right and left atria, and causes them to contract in a synchronous manner. The contraction of the upper heart chambers forces blood pooled therein through open heart valves and into the right and left ventricles or lower heart chambers. The atrial electrical depolarization wave arrives at the AV node superior to the ventricles and triggers the conduction of a ventricular depolarization wave down the bundle of His in the septum between the right and left ventricles to the apex of the heart. The ventricles contract after a brief atrio-ventricular (AV) delay time following the sinus node depolarization as the depolarization wave then advances superiorly, posteriorly, and anteriorly throughout the outer ventricular wall of the heart. The lower heart chambers contract and force the blood through the vascular system of the body. The contraction of the right and left ventricles proceeds in an organized fashion which optimizes emptying of the ventricular chambers. The synchronous electrical depolarization of the atrial and ventricular chambers can be electrically sensed and displayed, and the electrical waveform is characterized by accepted convention as the “PQRST” complex. The PQRST complex includes the P-wave, corresponding to the atrial depolarization wave, the R-wave, corresponding to the ventricular depolarization wave, and the T-wave which represents the re-polarization of the cardiac cells.
Various disease mechanisms cause conduction disturbances which interfere with the natural conduction system of the heart and affect the heart's ability to provide adequate cardiac output to the body. In certain disease mechanisms, the sinus node fails to depolarize and commence the P-wave as rapidly as required to satisfy the demand for oxygenated blood, or the atria may spontaneously depolarize at rates that are well in excess of the ability of the ventricles to respond. In these situations, the ventricles may compensate by depolarizing spontaneously from ectopic depolarization sites. In other cases where the SA node operates correctly, 1:1 atrial and ventricular depolarization synchrony is lost because the AV node fails to respond to all P-waves or a defect in the bundle of His interferes with the conduction of the ventricular depolarization. In all of these cases, the ventricles may contract at an inadequate rate to provide adequate cardiac output.
When the atria or ventricles contract too slowly, the patient may be a candidate for implantation with a cardiac pacemaker for restoring the heart rate by applying pacing pulses to the heart chamber that is malfunctioning at a pacing rate that restores adequate cardiac output. Modern implantable cardiac pacemakers comprise an implantable pulse generator (IPG) and a lead or leads extending from the IPG to pace/sense electrode or electrodes located with respect to the heart chamber to deliver the pacing pulses and sense the P-wave or R-wave. Typically, the leads are transvenously introduced into the particular heart chamber via the superior vena cava and right atrium, and the pace/sense electrodes are maintained in contact with the pace/sense electrode or electrodes located with respect to the heart chamber to deliver the pacing pulses and sense the P-wave or R-wave. Typically, the leads are transvenously introduced into the particular heart chamber via the superior vena cava and right atrium, and the pace/sense electrodes are maintained in contact with the heart tissue by a fixation mechanism at the distal end of the lead. However, leads may be placed subcutaneously between the IPG and the exterior of the heart, and the pace/sense electrodes attached to the epicardium at the desired sites. Moreover, endocardial coronary sinus leads are introduced through the right atrium into the coronary sinus and the great vein to locate pace/sense electrodes in proximity to the left atrium or the left ventricle.
A single chamber, demand pacemaker is implanted to supply pacing pulses to a single upper or lower heart chamber, typically the right atrium or right ventricle, in response to bradycardia of the same chamber. In an atrial, demand pacemaker operating in the AAI pacing mode, an atrial pacing pulse is delivered to the atrial pace/sense electrodes by the IPG if a P-wave is not sensed by an atrial sense amplifier coupled to the atrial pace/sense electrodes within an atrial escape interval (A—A interval) timed by an atrial escape interval timer. In a ventricular, demand pacemaker operating in the VVI pacing mode, a ventricular pacing pulse to the ventricular pace/sense electrodes if an R-wave is not sensed by a ventricular sense amplifier coupled to the ventricular pace/sense electrodes within a ventricular escape interval (V—V interval) timed by a ventricular escape interval timer.
A dual chamber, demand pacemaker is implanted to supply pacing pulses when required to one upper heart chamber and to one lower heart chamber, typically the right atrium and right ventricle. In a dual chamber, demand pacemaker operating in the DDD pacing mode, both the AAI and VVI pacing modes are followed under the above defined conditions. A ventricular pacing pulse is delivered to the ventricular pace/sense electrodes if an R-wave is not sensed by the ventricular sense amplifier coupled thereto within an AV time interval timed from the sensing of a P-wave by the atrial sense amplifier.
Over the years, it has been proposed that various conduction disturbances involving both bradycardia and tachycardia of a heart chamber could benefit from stimulation applied at multiple electrode sites positioned in or about it in synchrony with a depolarization which has been sensed at least one of the electrode sites. In addition, it has been proposed to employ pacing to compensate for conduction defects and in congestive heart failure where depolarizations that naturally occur in one upper or lower chamber are not conducted quickly enough to the other upper or lower heart chamber. In such cases, the right and left heart chambers do not contract in optimum synchrony with each other, and cardiac output suffers due to the timing imbalance. In other cases, spontaneous depolarizations of the left atrium or left ventricle occur at ectopic foci in these left heart chambers, and the natural activation sequence is grossly disturbed. In such cases, cardiac output deteriorates because the contractions of the right and left heart chambers are not synchronized sufficiently to eject blood therefrom.
In patients suffering from congestive heart failure, the hearts become dilated, and the conduction and depolarization sequences of the heart chambers may exhibit Intra-Atrial Conduction Defects (IACD), Left Bundle Branch Block (LBBB), Right Bundle Branch Block (RBBB), and Intra Ventricular Conduction Defects (IVCD). Single and dual chamber pacing of the right atrium and/or right ventricle can be counterproductive in such cases, depending on the defective conduction pathway and the locations of the

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