enkelkamerpacing
Enkelkamerpacing, or single-chamber pacing, is a cardiac pacing modality in which a pacemaker delivers electrical stimulation to a single heart chamber and senses activity in that same chamber. The two common configurations are ventricular single-chamber pacing (VVI or VVIR) and atrial single-chamber pacing (AAI or AAIR). A transvenous lead is placed in the right ventricle (for VVI) or the right atrium (for AAI), while the pacemaker generator sits in the chest. The device typically operates as a demand pacemaker, delivering impulses only when the intrinsic heart rate falls below a preset threshold; many devices also include rate-responsive features that adjust pacing rate to activity.
Advantages of enkelkamerpacing include a simpler system, smaller generator size, shorter implantation procedure, lower energy consumption,
Indications typically include chronic bradyarrhythmias such as sick sinus syndrome or certain AV blocks where AV