Earl Bakken, co-founder of Medtronic, developed the first wearable pacemaker in 1957. The device was worn with a chain around the neck and the electrodes were guided directly to the myocardium via a thoracotomy (Detho 2009).
In 1958, Senning implanted the first pacemaker. This was a simple chamber pacemaker with a fixed stimulation frequency (Gertsch 2008). The routine stimulation site was the right ventricular apex (Stellbrink 2024).
Since 1988, programmable pacemakers have been classified by the International Nomenclature of Pacemaker Systems, the so-called NBG code (Bauch 2002).
In 2002, Bristow et al. published a study of cardiac resynchronization therapy in patients with heart failure, the so-called COMPANION study, as did Cleland et al. in 2005 in the so-called CARE HF study. The biventricular pacemaker systems (BVP) also contain a third electrode cable that is placed on the left side wall of the heart (Antwerpes 2014).