abstract |
A method of controlling cardiac ventricular fibrillation and other tachyarrhythmias by delivery of two time-separated current pulses to separate pairs of electrodes spatially placed in, around, or on the heart. The technique produces a temporal and spatial summation of the delivered current, which results in a dramatic reduction in the voltage, current, and energy required for defibrillation, or cardioversion, and allows the use of a smaller implantable pulse generator. The new system achieves a more uniform distribution of current within the ventricular myocardium, thereby reducing the risk of tissue damage and increasing the margin of safety between effective shocks and myocardial depressing or damaging shocks. |