A CHIP OFF THE OLD BOX: PAINLESS DEFIBRILLATION

Mehdi Razavi, Mathews John, Allison Post, and Aydin Babakhani Texas Heart Institute (Houston, TX)

Winner of an HP Workstation; Category Sponsor: ZEUS 

Chaotic electrical activity of the heart (arrhythmia) has a tremendous impact on society’s well-being: not only is it the number one cause of both sudden death and stroke but it is also a leading contributor to congestive heart failure (CHF). The most definitive treatment for arrhythmia is shocking the heart (either by transcutaneous paddles or implantable cardiac defibrillators (ICDs). Shocks are both unpredictable and extremely painful, leading to PTSD in a high proportion of patients.

A cornerstone for treatment of CHF is cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) in which a specialized pacemaker is used to strengthen the weakened heart muscle. ICDs and pacemakers send electrical pulses to the heart through wires called leads. These leads are placed within the veins and advanced into the heart on one end and connected to a battery (or “can”) placed in the chest under the skin on the other end. Leads, however, cannot always be placed where needed and they are prone to infection and fracture.

The invention is a miniaturized, implantable, wireless, battery-less pacing system (nodes) that consists of tiny silicon-based integrated microchips that brings into sharp focus the remarkable possibility of eliminating shocks, leads, and wires. Each node weighs only about 0.09 gram because it requires no internal batteries. (Common pacemakers in use today weigh 2-28 grams.) The existing prototypes are custom manufactured but their designs will be easily translatable to standard manufacturing practices.

Because it can deliver pacing not only to any location but to an unlimited number of locations on the heart, this technology has the potential to deliver imperceptible (painless) defibrillation through sophisticated, coordinated, and targeted multi-site pacing bursts. The feasibility of defibrillation without the need for shocks has been demonstrated using a wired system. The technology also paced from up to six different sites using these wirelessly powered pacing chips (more than any wired system approved for medical use to date).

All patients with ICDs, more than 5 million Americans living with atrial fibrillation, and a substantial segment of patients with CRT devices stand to benefit from this technology. Patients with defibrillators may live longer but because of the painful shocks they receive, not necessarily better. Imperceptible defibrillation has remained the holy grail of the field. This technology will be: 1) safer since there is no need for lead wires that can fracture, dislodge, or cause infections; 2) more effective in treating the underlying cause of arrhythmias because they can be placed exactly where needed; and 3) able to deliver imperceptible defibrillation.

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