# Rapid ventricular pacing in cerebral aneurysm clipping: institutional workflow, systematic review, and single-arm meta-analysis

**Authors:** Johannes Wach, Martin Vychopen, Ferdinand Weber, Felix Arlt, Erdem Güresir

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s10143-025-03668-x · 2025-06-11

## TL;DR

This study shows rapid ventricular pacing during cerebral aneurysm clipping is safe and effective with low risks and high success rates.

## Contribution

A novel institutional workflow and meta-analysis demonstrating safety and efficacy of rapid ventricular pacing in aneurysm clipping.

## Key findings

- Rapid ventricular pacing achieved 94% aneurysm obliteration with no cardiac complications in institutional cases.
- Pooled analysis showed 1% arrhythmia rate and 0% mortality across 141 patients.
- Troponin T levels averaged 37.7 ng/L, indicating minimal myocardial injury.

## Abstract

This study examines the safety and efficacy of rapid ventricular pacing for cerebral aneurysm clipping, focusing on arrhythmia, mortality, aneurysm obliteration, neurological deficits, and myocardial damage assessed via postoperative troponin T levels, through an institutional series, systematic review, and meta-analysis.

Data were extracted from institutional database and published studies investigating the use of RVP in both ruptured and unruptured aneurysms. Outcomes analyzed included postoperative arrhythmia, mortality, complete obliteration of aneurysms, pacing cycles, mean arterial pressure (MAP) during pacing, pacing rates, and postoperative troponin T levels. Pooled event rates and proportions were calculated using a common effect model, and heterogeneity across studies was assessed using I² statistics.

In 15 institutional cases, RVP-assisted aneurysm clipping achieved stable neurological outcomes, no cardiac complications, and 94% aneurysm obliteration. Combined with literature (141 patients), pooled arrhythmia and mortality rates were 1% and 0%, respectively. Aneurysm obliteration was 92%, new neurological deficits 4%, and troponin T levels 37.7 ng/L. Mean pacing rate, cycles, and MAP were 187.4 bpm, 6.5, and 41.1 mmHg.

The findings suggest that rapid ventricular pacing in cerebral aneurysm clipping is associated with a low risk of cardiac arrhythmia and myocardial injury, while facilitating high rates of complete aneurysm obliteration. This technique appears safe, with minimal impact on postoperative mortality and neurological outcomes.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10143-025-03668-x.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10143-025-03668-x.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cerebral aneurysm (MESH:D002532), Aneurysm (MESH:D000783), neurological deficits (MESH:D009461), ruptured and unruptured aneurysms (MESH:D017542), arrhythmia (MESH:D001145), myocardial damage (MESH:D009202), cardiac complications (MESH:D006331)
- **Chemicals:** RVP (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12152091/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12152091