Atrial fibrillation (main)

Background

Causes

  • Cardiac (atrial enlargement)
    • HTN, CAD, valvular disease, cardiomyopathy, ACS
  • Noncardiac (increased automaticity)
    • Hyperthyroidism, PE, hypoxic pulmonary conditions, ethanol ("holiday heart"), drugs (cocaine, TCA)
    • Need to treat underlying cause

Complications

  • Hemodynamic compromise
    • Lowers CO by 20-30%
    • Impaired coronary blood flow
  • Arrhythmogenesis
  • Arterial thromboembolism

Diagnosis

  • Presentation
    • Asymptomatic - 44%
    • Palpitations - 32%
    • Dyspnea - 10%
    • Stroke - 2%
    • Also can present with decompensated heart failure, acute pulmonary edema
  • History
    • History of afib?
      • If yes, on medication?
      • If no, was the onset recgonized?
    • <48hrs duration?
  • Physical Exam
    • Evidence of hemodynamic instability, CHF?
  • ECG (3 types)
    • Typical
      • Irregularly, irregular R waves
      • QRS rate 140-160/min
    • Large fibrillatory waves
      • May look like flutter waves
        • Unlike a-flutter, the fibrillatory waves are irregular
    • Slow, regular A-fib
      • Due to complete AV block with escape rhythm
    • Ischemic changes?
    • Rate > 250? (think preexcitation)

Work-Up

  • ECG
  • Digoxin level (if appropriate)
  • Chem-10
  • TSH

Treatment

  • See Atrial Fibrillation (RVR)
  • Anti-thrombotic therapy
    • Chronic and paroxysmal a fib are associated with thrombus formation
    • Decision based on CHADS2 Score
      • Chf (1pt)
      • HTN (1pt)
      • Age>75 (1pt)
      • DM (1pt)
      • Stroke/TIA (2pts)
    • Score 0 - consider no treatment or ASA
    • Score 1 - consider coumadin or ASAn
    • Score 2-6 - consider coumadin (INR goal = 2-3)
    • All patients with valvular disease should be on anticoagulation

Cardioversion

  • If unstable OR low risk for clot (risk still about 1%)
    • Low Risk = <48 hrs symptoms, new dx, no hx similar episodes, no cause found by history, no LV dysfunction, no mitral valve dz, no prior thromboembolic event
  • Then anticoagulation for 3 weeks afterward

Chemical Cardioversion

Ibutilide (Class III)

1 mg over 10 min in pts >60 kg (or 0.01 mg/kg)

can repeat dose once if not sinus within 10 min of infusion

Avoid in hypoK, hypoMg, prolonged QT, torsades

Efficacy superior at 90 min to IV procainamide /sotalol

(monitor for few hours for polymorph VT (8% incidence), then d/c home with PO beta/Ca blockers)


Other Options:

Procainamide up to 1 gm IV (100 mg Q5 min) @ <20 mg/min

Amiodarone 0.75 mg/kg IV over 15 min. 1200 mg in 24h

Flecainide 300mg po

Disposition

  • New-Onset Afib (<48hrs)
    • If stable, no history of heart disease, no other indication for admission then most patients can be directly d/c'd from the ED after successful pharmacologic or electrical cardioversion
      • Outpatient TTE, cardiology follow-up
  • In the absence of angina, ECG evidence of MI, or recent infarction, no need to admit to r/o MI!
  • Indications for hospitalization:
    • Hemodynamic instability
    • Myocardial ischemia
    • CHF exacerbation 2/2 a-fib
    • Symptomatic recurrence in the ED

See Also

Atrial Fibrillation (RVR)==

Source

1/30/06 DONALDSON (adapted from Lampe), UpToDate