• DocumentCode
    1544990
  • Title

    Restoration of cardio-circulatory regulation by rate-adaptive pacemaker systems: the bioengineering view of a clinical problem

  • Author

    Werner, Jürgen ; Hexamer, Martin ; Meine, Mathias ; Lemke, Bernhard

  • Author_Institution
    Abteilung fur Biomed. Tech. der Med. Fak., Ruhr-Univ., Bochum, Germany
  • Volume
    46
  • Issue
    9
  • fYear
    1999
  • Firstpage
    1057
  • Lastpage
    1064
  • Abstract
    In the past, the development of rate-adaptive (sensor-controlled) pacemaker systems seems to have been determined primarily by the availability, compatibility and other properties of the technical sensor. This paper, however, focuses on the system physiological aspect in an attempt to answer the question to what extent physiological cardiovascular control is restored by the pacemaker system. This is a question which should be asked before attempting to design a sensor-controlled system and especially before designing multisensor systems using cardiorespiratory or metabolic coupling and those using cardiac signals. Further divisions are shown. From the bioengineering as well as from the physiological viewpoint a system should preferably not combine sensors from one and the same of these categories. At present direct bridging is available only for the atrioventricular (AV)-block, so that sick-sinus-syndrome (SSS) patients feedback control via cardiac signals ("inotropic" pacemaker) comes nearest the goal without, however, ideally bridging the gap. Open-loop systems should no longer be developed as single-sensor systems. A well developed activity sensor, however, which quickly pinpoints the most prominent stressor of cardiovascular control is best suited to complement another sensory system achieving closed-loop control. New and promising concepts orientated toward direct bridging are the analysis of monophasic action potentials the "dromotropic" concept, both of which seek direct correlation with the "chronotropic" information not available in SSS patients.
  • Keywords
    biocontrol; cardiovascular system; closed loop systems; feedback; pacemakers; atrioventricular-block; bioengineering viewpoint; cardiac signals; cardio-circulatory regulation restoration; cardiovascular control; chronotropic pacemaker; closed-loop control; direct bridging; dromotropic concept; feedback control; inotropic pacemaker; monophasic action potentials; open-loop control; physiological cardiovascular control; rate-adaptive pacemaker systems; sensor-controlled pacemaker systems; sick-sinus-syndrome patients; Biomedical engineering; Biosensors; Cardiology; Control systems; Open loop systems; Pacemakers; Sensor systems; Signal design; Signal restoration; Stress control; Adaptation, Physiological; Algorithms; Biomedical Engineering; Equipment Design; Feedback; Heart Block; Heart Conduction System; Humans; Models, Cardiovascular; Pacemaker, Artificial;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9294
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/10.784136
  • Filename
    784136