Percutaneous Extraction of Transvenous Permanent Pacemaker/Defibrillator Leads—A Single-Center Experience
Murat Akcay, Serkan Yuksel

TL;DR
This study shares a hospital's experience with safely removing old heart devices through a minimally invasive method, showing high success rates and manageable risks.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed single-center analysis of transvenous lead extraction outcomes and complications.
Findings
The most common reason for lead extraction was pocket infection, followed by lead dysfunction and system upgrade.
The manual traction method achieved a high procedural success rate despite long lead dwell times.
Major and minor complications occurred in 11% and 6.5% of patients, respectively.
Abstract
Background and Objectives: The number of cardiac pacemakers being used has increased in recent decades, and this increase has led to a rise in device-related complications, requiring percutaneous device extraction. Our aim was to present our single-center clinical experience in percutaneous lead extractions. Materials and Methods: We analyzed an observational retrospective cohort study of 93 patients for the transvenous removal of a total of 163 endocardial leads. We evaluated the device details, indications, lead characteristics, extraction methods, complications, reimplantation procedure, follow-up data, effectiveness, and safety. Results: Patients’ mean age was 68.6 ± 11.6 years. Lead extraction indications were pocket infection in 33 (35.5%), lead dysfunction in 33 (35.5%), and system upgrade in 21 (23%) cases, and lead endocarditis in 6 (6%) cases. The duration from implantation to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac pacing and defibrillation studies · Cardiac Arrhythmias and Treatments · Cardiac Structural Anomalies and Repair
