The AHA Guidelines and Scientific Statements Handbook

(vip2019) #1

The AHA Guidelines and Scientifi c Statements Handbook


Table 16.5 Recommendations for long-term therapy of accessory pathway-mediated arrhythmias


Arrhythmia Recommendation Classifi cation Level of evidence


WPW syndrome preexcitation and symptomatic
arrhythmias, well tolerated


Catheter ablation I B

Flecainide, propafenone IIa C
Sotalol, amiodarone, beta-blockers Ia C
Verapamil, diltiazem, digoxin II C

WPW syndrome (with AF and rapid-conduction or
poorly tolerated AVRT)


Catheter ablation I B

AVRT, poorly tolerated (no preexcitation) Catheter ablation I B
Flecainide, propafenone IIa C
Sotalol, amiodarone IIa C
Beta-blockers IIb C
Verapamil, diltiazem, digoxin II C


Single or infrequent AVRT episode(s) (no
preexcitation)


None I C

Vagal maneuvers I B
Pill-in-the-pocket – verapamil, diltiazem,
beta-blockers

IB

Catheter ablation Ia B
Sotalol, amiodarone IIb B
Flecainide, propafenone IIb C
Digoxin II C

Preexcitation, asymptomatic None I C
Catheter ablation Ia B


The order in which treatment recommendations appear in this table within each class of recommendation does not necessarily refl ect a preferred sequence of admin-
istration. Please refer to text for details. For pertinent drug dosing information please refer to the ACC/AHA/ESC Guidelines on the Management of Patients With
Atrial Fibrillation.
AF indicates atrial fi brillation; AVRT, atrioventricular reciprocating tachycardia; WPW, Wolff–Parkinson–White.


distinguish micro re-entry from abnormal automa-
ticity. Incessant atrial tachycardia is usually seen in
children or young adults and may produce a tachy-
cardic myopathy.


Diagnoses
The diagnoses should be suspected when the patient
presents with a long RP tachycardia where the P
wave is different from sinus and is not compatible
with retrograde activation from the AV node. In
addition, if adenosine results in AV block with per-


sistence of tachycardia, then the diagnoses is almost
always atrial tachycardia.

Tr e a t m e n t
Acute therapy of FAT includes initial trials of
adenosine (effective in 20–30% of cases) or other
AV nodal blockers (beta-blockers or Ca++ channel
blockers). The latter drugs seldom terminate
the tachycardia, but may be used to achieve rate
control by AV nodal blockade. Direct-current
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