Elayi Claude S, Lusher Stephanie, Meeks Nyquist Jillian L, Darrat Yousef, Morales Gustavo X, Miller Craig S
J Am Dent Assoc. 2015 Feb;146(2):121-8. doi: 10.1016/j.adaj.2014.11.016.
The authors aimed to determine whether electrical dental devices would interfere with the function of cardiac pacemakers or implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) in humans.
The authors exposed asymptomatic nonpacemaker-dependent patients to commonly used electrical dental equipment (for example, battery-operated curing lights, ultrasonic baths, ultrasonic scalers, electric pulp testers, and electric toothbrushes) in an outpatient cardiology clinic. The authors operated dental devices at various distances and programmed cardiac devices to sense and pace. The authors obtained cardiac tracings using a cardiac programming unit and a cardiac provider who noted any interference interpreted the results in real time.
The authors enrolled 32 consecutive patients and tested 12 pacemakers and 20 ICDs. They did not observe any significant clinical interference in sensing and pacing functions in any patient; however, they noted minor interference without clinical impact in the telemetry from the cardiac programming unit during use of the ultrasonic scaler and bath.
The findings of this prospective study suggest that electrical devices commonly used in dental practices do not interfere with the sensing and pacing of contemporary cardiac patients' pacemakers or ICDs. However, they do interfere with the telemetry from the cardiac programming unit, without any clinical impact on patient safety. These findings should help in the development of clinical guidelines regarding dental management of patients with pacemakers or ICDs.
Electrical dental devices (for example, ultrasonic baths, ultrasonic scalers) induced minor interference with programmers that interrogate cardiac devices implanted in patients; however, overall, dental devices do not appear to interfere with pacemakers' and defibrillators' pacing and sensing function.
作者旨在确定牙科电子设备是否会干扰人体心脏起搏器或植入式心脏复律除颤器(ICD)的功能。
作者在门诊心脏病诊所让无症状的非起搏器依赖患者接触常用的牙科电子设备(例如,电池供电的光固化灯、超声波浴槽、超声洁牙器、牙髓电活力测试仪和电动牙刷)。作者在不同距离操作牙科设备,并对心脏设备进行感知和起搏编程。作者使用心脏编程单元获取心脏描记图,并由一名心脏专家实时记录并解读任何干扰情况。
作者连续纳入32例患者,测试了12台起搏器和20台ICD。他们未观察到任何患者的感知和起搏功能出现明显的临床干扰;然而,他们注意到在使用超声洁牙器和超声浴槽时,心脏编程单元的遥测出现了无临床影响的轻微干扰。
这项前瞻性研究的结果表明,牙科实践中常用的电子设备不会干扰当代心脏病患者起搏器或ICD的感知和起搏功能。然而,它们确实会干扰心脏编程单元的遥测,对患者安全没有任何临床影响。这些发现应有助于制定有关起搏器或ICD患者牙科管理的临床指南。
牙科电子设备(例如,超声波浴槽、超声洁牙器)对询问植入患者体内心脏设备的编程器产生了轻微干扰;然而,总体而言,牙科设备似乎不会干扰起搏器和除颤器的起搏和感知功能。