Atrial Fibrillation Flashcards

1
Q

what is atrial fibrillation happen

A

contraction of atria is uncoordinated, rapid and irregular

due to disorganised electrical activity that ovverides normal organised activity from SA nose

leads to irregular conduction of electrical impulses to ventricles

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2
Q

what does irregular conduction of electrical impulses to ventricles result in

A
  • irregularly irregular ventricular contractions
  • tachycardia
  • heart failure - poor filling of ventricles during diastole
  • risk of stroke
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3
Q

presenting symptoms

A

palpitations
SOB
syncope

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4
Q

2 differentials for an irregularly irregulaer pulse

A

AF

ventricular ectopics

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5
Q

ECG findings in AF

A

absent P waves,
narrow QRS complex tachycardia,
irregularly irregular ventricular rhythm,

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6
Q

valvular AF

A

when patients with AF also have mod-severe mitral stenosis or a mechanical heart valve

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7
Q

most common causes of AF

A
sepsis,
mitral valve pathology,
IHD,
thyrotoxicosis,
htn
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8
Q

2 principles of treating AF

A

rate or rhythm control

anticoagulation

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9
Q

All patients with AF should have rate control as first line unless…

A
  • reversible cause for AF
  • new onset AF (<48hrs)
  • AF causing heart failure
  • remain symptomatic depsite effective rate controlling
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10
Q

options for rate control

A
  1. beta blocker
  2. CCB
  3. digoxin (only sedentary people)
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11
Q

when can rhythm control be offered to people wih AF

A
  • reversible cause
  • new onset (<48hrs)
  • AF causing heart failure
  • remain symptomatic depstite effective rate control
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12
Q

aim of rate control

A

to get heart rate below 100 to extend the time during diastole when ventricles can fill w bloo d

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13
Q

aim of ryhtm control

A

return the patient to normal sinus rhythm

can be done via single cardioversion or medicalluy

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14
Q

immediate cardiovesion if

A

the AF has been present <48hrs or they are severely haemodynamically unstable

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15
Q

delayed cardioversion if…

A

AF has been present >48hrs and they are stable

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16
Q

2 options for cardioversion

A

pharmacological

electrical

17
Q

pharmacological cardioversion

A

flecanide or

amiodarone (if structural heart disease)

18
Q

electrical cardioversion

A

rapidly shock the heart back into sinus rhythm

involves sedation/GA and using defib to deliver controlled shocks

19
Q

long term medical rhythm control

A
  1. beta blockers
  2. dronedarone
  3. amiodarone
20
Q

paroxysmal AF

A

the AF comes and goes in episodes, usually no more than 48hrs
should still be anticoagulated based on CHADVASCs score

21
Q

warfarin

A

vitamin K antagonist

prolongs prothrombin time

22
Q

how to assess how anticoagulated a pt is by warfarin

A

measure INR

23
Q

what is INR

A

calculation of how the prothrombin time of the patient compares with the prothrombin time of a normal healthy afult

24
Q

warfarin monitoring

A

close monitoring of INR and frequent dose adjustments

25
Q

DOACs example

A

apixiban
dabigantran
rivaroxaban

26
Q

DOAC advantages over warfarin

A
  • no monitoring required

- no major interaction problems

27
Q

CHADSVASC score

A

tool for assessing wheather a patient with AF should be started on anticoagulation

28
Q

CHADVASC score: 0

A

no anticoagulation

29
Q

CHADVASC score: 1

A

consider anticoagulation

30
Q

CHADVASC score: >1

A

offer anticoagulation

31
Q

HAS-BLED

A

assessment tool for establishing a patient’s risk of major bleeding whilst on anticoagulation