Baroreflex Activation Therapy and Subcutaneous ICDs: A Manageable Electrical Mismatch
Division
South Atlantic
Hospital
Orange Park Medical Center
Document Type
Case Report
Publication Date
1-2-2026
Keywords
cardiac assist devices, chronic heart failure, electrophysiology
Disciplines
Cardiovascular Diseases | Internal Medicine | Medicine and Health Sciences
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Baroreflex activation therapy (BAT) improves symptoms and quality of life in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, while subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (S-ICDs) protect against sudden cardiac death without intravascular hardware. Unipolar BAT stimulation poses a theoretical risk of interference with S-ICD sensing.
CASE SUMMARY: A 52-year-old man with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, end-stage renal disease on dialysis, and an S-ICD underwent BAT implantation. During routine hemodialysis, he experienced ventricular fibrillation arrest that the S-ICD failed to detect, misclassifying the rhythm as atrial fibrillation. Device interrogation revealed high-frequency artifact corresponding to BAT output at 6 mA. BAT output was reduced to 1 mA, and S-ICD vectors were reprogrammed. Three months later, the S-ICD appropriately detected and terminated sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia.
DISCUSSION: BAT-S-ICD interference can result in arrhythmia undersensing. With increasing adoption of both therapies, structured compatibility testing, individualized programming, and multidisciplinary follow-up are critical.
TAKE-HOME MESSAGE: Concurrent S-ICD and BAT use is feasible with careful testing and output optimization.
Publisher or Conference
JACC Case Reports
Recommended Citation
Aigbe E, Mundhra G, Egbo M, Hu YL. Baroreflex Activation Therapy and Subcutaneous ICDs: A Manageable Electrical Mismatch. JACC Case Rep. Published online January 2, 2026. doi:10.1016/j.jaccas.2025.106652