Atrial Fibrillation
Valentin Fuster and Lars Rydén
15
Organization of committee and evidence
Review
Changes since the initial publication of the 2001
guidelines
Recommendations for management of patients with
atrial fi brillation
Pharmacological rate control during atrial fi brillation
Preventing thromboembolism
Cardioversion of atrial fi brillation
Pharmacological cardioversion
Direct-current cardioversion
Pharmacological enhancement of direct-current
cardioversion
Prevention of thromboembolism in patients with atrial
fi brillation undergoing cardioversion
Maintenance of sinus rhythm
Future directions
Novel antithrombotic compounds
Ablation strategies
Organization of committee and evidence
Review
Atrial fi brillation (AF) is the most common sus-
tained cardiac rhythm disturbance, increasing in
prevalence with age. AF is often associated with
structural heart disease, although a substantial pro-
portion of patients with AF have no detectable
heart disease [1,2]. Hemodynamic impairment and
thromboembolic events related to AF result in sig-
nifi cant morbidity, mortality, and cost [3,4]. Accord-
ingly, the American College of Cardiology (ACC),
the American Heart Association (AHA), and the
European Society of Cardiology (ESC) created a
committee, composed of representatives of the ACC,
AHA, ESC, the European Heart Rhythm Association
(EHRA), and the Heart Rhythm Society (HRS), to
establish guidelines for optimum management of
this frequent and complex arrhythmia. The fi rst
version of these guidelines was released in 2001. The
ACC/AHA/ESC Writing Committee to revise the
2001 Guidelines conducted a comprehensive review
of the relevant literature from 2001 to 2006 using
the PubMed/MEDLINE and Cochrane Library data-
bases [1].
Changes since the initial publication of
the 2001 guidelines
Besides incorporating major clinical trials such as
those that compared rhythm control and rate control
approaches to long-term management the text was
reorganized to better refl ect implications for patient
care. Presently it starts with recognition of AF and
its pathogenesis and the general priorities of rate
control, prevention of thromboembolism, and
methods available for use in selected patients to
correct the arrhythmia and maintain normal sinus
rhythm. Advances in catheter-based ablation tech-
nologies have been incorporated. Recommenda-
tions do, however, recognize that such vital details
as patient selection, optimum catheter positioning,
absolute rates of treatment success, and the fre-
quency of complications remain incompletely eval-
uated in prospective, randomised trials. Sections on
drug therapy have been confi ned to human studies
with compounds approved for clinical use in North
America and/or Europe. As data on the manage-
ment of patients prone to AF in special circum-
stances are more robust, recommendations are
based on a higher level of evidence than in the fi rst
The AHA Guidelines and Scientific Statements Handbook
Edited by Valentin Fuster © 2009 American Heart Association
ISBN: 978-1-405-18463-2