Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9936494 | The American Journal of Cardiology | 2005 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Ultrasound measurements, including xiphoid-to-pericardial distance and deployment angle, were made on human fetuses as a function of gestational age for the purpose of assessing the likelihood of 3 failure modes of a monolithic fetal pacemaker, including primary positioning failure due to device length and secondary dislodgement failure due to somatic growth. The small variation of the measurements over the gestational age range relevant to device implantation for the major indications of the device (for complete heart block complicated by hydrops and for bradycardia risk after fetal surgery or intrauterine intervention) predicts a small likelihood of these failure modes.
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Authors
Evgueni MD, Howard A. PhD, DaeGyun MD, PhD, Daniel H. MSc, Bettina F. MD, Vicki L. MD, Mehmet MD, Letitia RDMS, David PhD, Edmond W. PhD, Boris M. MD, PhD, Marc MD,