ABC Farma - Artificial Intelligence Doctor
Sleeping in the prone position (face-down) can contribute to nocturnal non-capture in patients with a leadless pacemaker such as the Abbott Aveir VR LP through a combination of:
These factors can temporarily increase the pacing capture threshold at night. If this temporary threshold becomes higher than the programmed output of the device, pacing impulses may fail to depolarize the myocardium, leading to transient non-capture.
When a person sleeps face-down, the heart can be compressed between:
This external pressure can slightly modify:
The Aveir VR LP depends on stable, intimate contact with the right ventricular myocardium to deliver effective pacing. Slight changes in local tissue geometry or tension can:
If the pacing threshold rises above the programmed output voltage and pulse width, the pacing spikes may no longer capture the myocardium, resulting in nocturnal non-capture while the patient remains in that specific position.
During sleep, particularly in deep stages, there is a natural increase in parasympathetic (vagal) tone. Higher vagal tone leads to:
These vagal effects can subtly increase the pacing capture threshold, especially in patients with:
The prone position, by increasing pressure on the chest and abdomen, may further stimulate vagal activity (for example via increased intrathoracic and intra-abdominal pressure), enhancing this effect. When the combination of higher vagal tone + prone mechanical factors elevates the threshold above the programmed output, intermittent non-capture can occur at night.
The prone position can:
These changes alter right ventricular geometry and wall tension. Even small modifications in:
can significantly influence the local electric field generated by the leadless pacemaker and the threshold required for capture. Leadless devices are highly dependent on local myocardial conditions, and these subtle geometric changes can momentarily worsen capture.
Some individuals have shallower breathing or mild hypoventilation when lying face-down. Even modest decreases in:
can increase myocardial irritability and may slightly raise capture thresholds. While this may not cause obvious symptoms, in patients whose pacemaker output is programmed close to their threshold, these small changes at night can be enough to produce transient non-capture.
During recumbency and sleep, there is a normal shift of fluid from the lower extremities toward the torso. This can:
In prone position, the anterior thorax and structures closer to the mattress may experience more pressure and slightly increased tissue edema. Around the pacemaker implantation site, very small degrees of fluid accumulation or tissue pressure can:
Again, if the pacemaker’s programmed output is not well above this transiently elevated threshold, non-capture can occur while the patient remains in that position.
The Aveir VR leadless pacemaker incorporates:
When tissue conditions change (impedance, threshold, local contact), the device may:
If the threshold rise in prone position is:
the pacemaker may show repeated non-capture episodes in stored diagnostics and on remote monitoring, especially during nighttime intervals where the patient is face-down.
A key point is that these episodes are frequently:
Therefore, many patients have:
Positional nocturnal non-capture becomes more clinically important when:
In device interrogation or remote monitoring, clinicians may see:
Correlation with the patient’s report (for example, “I sleep face-down” or “I notice issues when lying on my stomach”) strengthens the suspicion of positional nocturnal non-capture.
Potential management approaches include:
In patients with an Aveir VR leadless pacemaker, sleeping in the prone position can cause nocturnal non-capture because this posture alters chest mechanics, right ventricular geometry, tissue contact, and autonomic balance. These changes can temporarily raise pacing thresholds above the device’s programmed output. The phenomenon is often positional and reversible but may be clinically significant in pacemaker-dependent patients or in those with borderline daytime thresholds.
Any patient with suspected nocturnal non-capture should have a full device interrogation and clinical evaluation by their cardiologist or electrophysiologist.