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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

and
potentially
longer
battery
life
due
to
the
use
of
a
single
lead.
This
can
be
particularly
advantageous
in
patients
with
limited
venous
access
or
higher
infection
risk.
Disadvantages
include
the
lack
of
atrioventricular
(AV)
synchrony
when
pacing
the
ventricle,
which
can
reduce
hemodynamic
efficiency
and
lead
to
symptoms
or
pacemaker
syndrome
in
some
cases.
Because
AV
coordination
is
not
preserved,
single-chamber
pacing
may
be
less
suitable
for
patients
who
could
benefit
from
AV
synchrony
and
stable
exercise
capacity.
synchrony
is
not
essential,
persistent
atrial
fibrillation
with
a
slow
ventricular
response,
or
situations
where
a
dual-chamber
system
is
not
feasible
due
to
anatomy,
infection
risk,
or
resource
constraints.
In
modern
practice,
choice
between
single-
and
dual-chamber
pacing
depends
on
the
patient’s
rhythm,
comorbidities,
and
goals
of
therapy,
with
single-chamber
devices
still
used
in
select
cases.