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Heart Asia 2009;2009:11-15 doi:10.1136/ha.2008.000265
  • Practice viewpoints

Choosing pacemakers appropriately

  1. G K Panicker1,
  2. B Desai1,
  3. Y Lokhandwala2
  1. 1
    Quintiles ECG Services, Mumbai, India
  2. 2
    Arrhythmia Associates, Mumbai, India
  1. Dr Y Lokhandwala, 403, Classique, NS Road 1, JVPD Scheme, Mumbai 400 049, India; dryash2004{at}rediffmail.com
  • Accepted 20 January 2009

Abstract

The range of implantable cardiac pacing devices has expanded, with the advances in available technology. Indications for cardiac pacing devices, that is pacemakers, implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) and cardiac resynchronisation therapy devices (CRTs), have expanded for the treatment, diagnosis and monitoring of bradycardia, tachycardia and heart failure. While the need for pacemakers is increasing, not all patients who require pacemakers are receiving them, especially in the Asia-Pacific region. There is a need to be more critical in advising the use of more expensive devices like ICDs and CRT/CRT-D devices, since most patients in the Asia-Pacific region pay out of pocket for these therapies. The AHA-ACC guidelines need not be blindly followed, since they are too wide-sweeping and are often based on the intention-to-treat basis of trials rather than on the parameters of the patients actually enrolled.

Footnotes

  • Competing interests: None.

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"The publication of a premier cardiology journal, Heart Asia, by BMJ Publishing Group is a significant step forwards as this will become the preferred journal of choice for many of the original research work in the Asia Pacific region,"

Professor Vinay K Bahl, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi

"The launch of Heart Asia will provide doctors in China a platform to publish their original research data and it is an important bridge that will allow the Chinese cardiologists to integrate with the international cardiology community,"

Professor Hu Dayi, Chief of the Heart Centre at Peking University’s People’s Hospital, Beijing

"Leading cardiology centres in the Asia Pacific region do some of the finest research in the world and the launch of Heart Asia is timely as it will allow top class research papers to be published in an Asia Pacific cardiology journal,"

Professor Ruey Jen Sung, Professor, Emeritus, Stanford University.

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