tiny pacemaker implant
This X-ray shows the chest cavity of a patient too small for traditional care, driving the UofL-Norton team to perform the first known U.S. human implantation of a novel-designed tiny pacemaker in a premature infant.

A multidisciplinary team within Norton Children鈥檚 Heart Institute, affiliated with the , worked together to save the life of an infant born with congenital structural heart defects and complete atrioventricular block (CCAVB) that led to a slow heart rate. The patient was too small for the traditional path of care, driving the innovative team to perform the first known human implantation of a novel-designed tiny pacemaker in a premature infant.

鈥淚t is remarkable how our team of pediatric specialists came together with the device company to offer a resolution for such a small patient weighing less than three pounds at the time of implant,鈥 said Soham Dasgupta, pediatric electrophysiologist, Norton Children鈥檚 Heart Institute, and UofL assistant professor of pediatric cardiology. 鈥淭his case is unlike any other and we are so pleased to see this patient thriving as a result of the innovative approach.鈥

Approximately 1 in 22,000 infants are born with CCAVB. Untreated, the condition has a high incidence of prolonged illness or death. The usual treatment involves implantation of a pacemaker once the patient meets a minimum body size, typically 4.5 to 5.5 pounds, to accommodate the implantable device. Taking time for the baby to grow while being otherwise treated is strongly preferred for this situation. With this patient, however, the traditional plan was not working.

鈥淚n this instance, the patient was not of the optimal size and medical/conservative management was unsuccessful, so a specially modified pediatric-sized pacemaker also known as an implantable pulse generator (IPG) created by Medtronic was used,鈥 Dasgupta said.

Dasgupta and his colleague, Christopher L. Johnsrude, director of pediatric and adult congenital electrophysiology at Norton and UofL associate professor of pediatric cardiology, reviewed the relevant preclinical data from a procedure where a similar tiny pediatric IPG had been implanted in an adult Yucatan miniature pig, an animal with a heart that resembles a child鈥檚 heart.

Once it was determined the pediatric IPG was potentially compatible with the patient at Norton Children鈥檚, Dasgupta worked with Norton Children鈥檚 Research Institute, affiliated with the UofL School of Medicine, and the manufacturer, to obtain local Institutional Review Board approval and emergency authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.聽

The procedure to place the implant was completed over the course of a two-hour open-heart surgery. The tiny device measures 1.16 by 0.65 by 0.38 inches and weighs 0.18 ounces.

鈥淲hile the operative steps might be comparable to the usual pacemaker implantation surgery, this surgery was especially delicate due to the very small size of the baby,鈥 said Bahaaldin Alsoufi, chief of pediatric cardiothoracic surgery, co-director of Norton Children鈥檚 Heart Institute, and UofL professor of cardiothoracic surgery. 鈥淭his tiny pacemaker generator was positioned in the abdominal wall on the right side and was connected to the usual leads that were attached to the heart.

“This novel device will provide the necessary support that the baby currently needs. At time of repair of the patient鈥檚 congenital heart defect in the future, we will be able to utilize these same leads and likely connect them then to a traditional larger pacemaker generator.鈥

To date, the patient is doing well and continues to be cared for by cardiac and neonatal specialists across Norton Children鈥檚 Heart Institute.