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Case Reports
Journal Article
Thermal burn resulting from prolonged transcutaneous pacing in a patient with complete heart block.
American Journal of Emergency Medicine 2018 August
Temporary transcutaneous pacing devices are used to treat symptomatic bradyarrhythmias that are unresponsive to medical therapy until it resolves or a more stable pacing device is established. Pain is the most common complication. Skin burns as a complication are uncommon. A female patient presented with a complete atrioventricular block that caused altered mental status and required orotracheal intubation. A temporary transcutaneous pacing device was used to treat the bradyarrhythmia and maintained for 12 h until a temporary transvenous pacemaker was placed. The patient developed a third degree skin burn in the area where the anterior pacing patch was placed. Bradycardia is a common complaint in the emergency department. Temporary transcutaneous cardiac pacing is a widely available treatment modality that serves as initial management for these cases and allows us to keep patients stable until a more stable pacing solution is available. Burns as a complication of transcutaneous pacing are uncommon.
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