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Cardiac resynchronization therapy may reduce central sleep apnea, but there is no prospective randomized study so far demonstrating such an effect in patients with conventional pacemaker undergoing upgrading to CRT because of heart failure.
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Within the last decade cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) has been proven to be an effective therapy to reduce morbidity and mortality in chronic heart failure patients with wide QRS complex, in particular complete left bundle branch block. New indications have recently been established, including patients with mild symptoms and patients in need of conventional pacing such as high-grade atrioventricular block.
More than half - up to 80% - of patients with heart failure suffer from concomitant sleep apnea (SA), which further worsens symptoms and prognosis. Cardiac resynchronization therapy may ameliorate sleep apnea, but only the central form of sleep apnea (CSA). However, only very small uncontrolled studies with mainly less than 20 patients have been reported so far concerning the interactions between CRT and sleep apnea, and no data are available in patients with conventional right ventricular pacing undergoing upgrading to CRT.
Therefore, we want to perform a study called UPGRADE which is characterized
Unfortunately, one third of patients still do not benefit from CRT (so-called non-responders). On the other hand, up to 20% of patients greatly benefit and completely recover in terms of normalization of left ventricular ejection fraction and/or functional capacity (so-called super-responders). Research is urgently needed to decrease the number of non-responders and increase the number of super-responders.
Patient selection is still based on QRS duration and its morphology. Echocardiography and other imaging techniques for mechanical dyssynchrony assessment have failed to be a useful predictor for adequate patient selection. Therefore, we further want to test whether CRT itself does not only improve concomitant sleep apnea, but also if preexisting sleep apnea predicts the response to CRT in patients with previously conventional right-ventricular pacing undergoing an upgrade to CRT by additional implantation of a left ventricular lead.
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56 participants in 2 patient groups
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