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Editorial
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Volume 336:1518-1519 May 22, 1997 Number 21
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Cardiac Pacemakers and Cellular Telephones

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The earliest cardiac pacemakers did not sense spontaneous beats, and their metronomic "asynchronous" stimuli competed with patients' intrinsic heart rhythms (if any were present). Later, "demand" or "inhibitory" pacemakers could sense spontaneous depolarizations and synchronize with them. This averted competition with the patient's intrinsic rhythm but created the potential for inappropriate inhibition of stimuli during single-chamber pacing when extraneous electromagnetic interference was mistaken for spontaneous cardiac depolarization. With the advent of dual-chamber pacing, extraneous electromagnetic interference sensed in the atrium could trigger inappropriate stimuli in the ventricle, producing palpitations or even inducing ventricular tachycardia. Extraneous electromagnetic interference has long been . . . [Full Text of this Article]

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Cardiac Pacemakers and Cellular Telephones
Zuckerman B. D., Shein M. J., Danzi J. T., Carlo G. L., Hayes D. L., Johnson C. M., Steffens R. A., Bernstein A. D., Roelke M.
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N Engl J Med 1997; 337:1006-1008, Oct 2, 1997. Correspondence

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