Bradycardia and asystole with the use of vagus nerve stimulation for the treatment of epilepsy: A rare complication of intraoperative device testing

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Abstract

Purposes: A 56-year-old man with mild mental retardation, right congenital hemiparesis, and refractory partial seizures was referred for vagus nerve stimulation (VNS). Methods: Routine lead diagnostic testing during the surgical procedure (1.0 mA, 20 Hz, and 500 μs, for ~17 s) resulted, during the initial two stimulations, in a bradycardia of ~30 beats/min. A third attempt led to transient asystole that required atropine and brief cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Results: The procedure was immediately terminated, the device removed, and the patient recovered completely. A postoperative cardiologic evaluation, including an ECG, 24-h Holter monitor, echocardiogram, and a tilt-table test, was normal. Conclusions: Possible mechanisms for the bradycardia/asystole include stimulation of cervical cardiac branches of the vagus nerve either by collateral current spread or directly by inadvertent placement of the electrodes on one of these branches; improper plugging of the electrodes into the pulse generator, resulting in erratic varying intensity of stimulation; reverse polarity; and idiosyncratic-type reaction in a hypersusceptible individual. The manufacturer reports the occurrence rate in ~3,500 implants for this intraoperative event to be approximately one in 875 cases or 0.1%.

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Asconapé, J. J., Moore, D. D., Zipes, D. P., Hartman, L. M., & Duffell, W. H. (1999). Bradycardia and asystole with the use of vagus nerve stimulation for the treatment of epilepsy: A rare complication of intraoperative device testing. Epilepsia, 40(10), 1452–1454. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1528-1157.1999.tb02019.x

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