Background: Left ventricular (LV) pacing has been suggested to complement other forms of therapy in patients with heart failure.
Methods and results: We investigated 17 patients (15 men, 2 women, aged 68 +/- 6 years, 10 ischemic and 7 primary dilated cardiomyopathy) with heart failure (13 were in New York Heart Association class IV and 4 in class III). One month after LV pacer implantation, 12 patients reported clinical improvement (mean class 3.7 before pacing vs 2.6 with LV pacing; P = .001). We report the results of 3 equilibrium-gated blood pool studies performed in each patient, 1 before pacing and 2 after pacer implantation (1 with pacing on, and 1 after turning off the pacer). LV pacing did not modify LV ejection fraction. Phase analysis demonstrated a significant decrease of the interventricular phase shift (delta(pi)) with LV pacing (no pacing, delta(pi) = 8.99 degrees +/- 19.05 degrees; delta7n= -0.97 degrees +/- 27.85 degrees with LV pacing). Clinical improvement was observed in patients with an initial positive delta(pi) that decreased with pacing and/or an initial LV phase standard deviation >50 degrees that decreased with pacing.
Conclusion: LV pacing induces interventricular and intraventricular synchronization. A decrease of the interventricular phase shift seems to be the most important predictor of functional recovery for paced patients with heart failure.