Internal Medicine

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P1: SBT


0521779407-05 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 20:49


Atrial Fibrillation (AF) 189

■If rapid: dizziness and hypotension, shortness of breath, chest pain
tests
■Basic Test: 12-lead ECG: no recognizable discrete P waves. Irregularly
irregular QRS complexes, may be wide from aberrant conduction.
Ventricular response <40 to >180 bpm.
■Specific Diagnostic Test: Echocardiogram: identify structural heart
disease, left atrial thrombus (with transesophageal echo) and mea-
sure atrial and LV size and function

differential diagnosis
■Frequent atrial premature complexes may mimic AF but P waves
easily recognized on 12-lead ECG.
■Multifocal atrial tachycardia: irregularly irregular rate and pulse but
multiple (>2) P wave morphologies.
management
What to Do First
■Vital signs to assess hemodynamic response to rapid AF; 12 lead ECG
to measure ventricular rate and to assess acute myocardial ischemia,
infarction or pericarditis.

General Measures
■Avoid caffeine and alcohol if correlated with AF occurrence

specific therapy
Indicated for rapid ventricular response and restoration of normal sinus
rhythm (NSR)
Acute
■Emergency DC cardioversion (synchronized to R wave) to restore
NSR when a rapid ventricular response results in hypotension, pul-
monary edema, or ischemia.
■In stable patients: beta blockers or calcium channel blockers (ver-
apamil, diltiazem), either IV or PO, to slow ventricular response.
Digoxin less effective.
■Cardioversion to NSR without anticoagulation if AF <48 hours dura-
tion or atrial clot is excluded by transesophageal echo (92% sensitiv-
ity and 98% specificity).
■Cardioversion: DC shock, IV ibutilide (30% success rate), IV or PO
procainamide, sotalol, propafanone or PO amiodarone. (IV amio-
darone not established).
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