Four years after production of the first transistor in 1954, C. W. Lillehei, a cardiothoracic surgeon, and Earl Bakken, an electrical technician, developed the first battery-operated system to pace the heart. This was followed just 2 years later by the introduction of the first implantable, battery-powered permanent pacemaker (
PPM). Further advancements in technology ultimately led to the development of the implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (
ICD) in the early 1980s, which was subsequently
FDA approved for use in 1985. With continuing technological advancements, modern cardiac implantable electronic devices (
CIEDs) have become extraordinarily sophisticated and bear only a slight resemblance to their early predecessors. More than 1.5 million Americans have
PPMs and 500,000 have
ICDs. In addition to permanently implanted cardiac devices, the heart can be paced temporarily using pads placed on the skin (transcutaneous pacing) or via leads placed through a central vein (transvenous pacing), into the esophagus (esophageal pacing), or onto the surface of the heart (epicardial pacing). People with
CIEDs span a large age range, from the very young to the elderly. Adults with
CIEDs frequently have coronary artery disease (50%), hypertension (20%), and diabetes (10%). Generally speaking, pacing is indicated for patients with disorders of the sinoatrial (
SA) node (i.e., unable to initiate a sinus beat) and/or atrioventricular (
AV) node (i.e., unable to properly conduct a sinus impulse). Most recently, in 2001, the
FDA-approved devices to pace both the atria and ventricles (biventricular pacing, also known as cardiac resynchronization therapy [
CRT]).
ICDs are implanted for people who have a history of, or are at risk for, malignant ventricular arrhythmias, such as ventricular tachycardia (
VT) and ventricular fibrillation (
VF).