Lecture 7 Flashcards

1
Q

definition of afib

A

Abnormal tachyarrhythmia characterized by rapid and irregular beating

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2
Q

pathophysiology of afib

A

1) Dilation from rise in intra-atrial pressure leads to activation of RAAS and ultimately atrial remodeling & fibrosis
2) Disorganized electrical impulses develop usually originating from pulmonary veins
3) Left atrial squeeze is diminished, LA appendage is stunned

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3
Q

signs and symptoms of afib

A

SSx

  • absent in 1/3 of patients
  • Palpitations
  • Tachycardia (irregular)
  • DOE (rapid ventricular response)
  • Fatigue
  • Lightheadedness
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4
Q

definitive diagnosis of afib

A

EKG- absence of P waves, fast/ irregular

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5
Q

paroxysmal AF

A

-most common subtype (50%) -terminates by itself within 7 days of onset (most within 24 hrs)

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6
Q

persistent AF

A

-doesnt self terminate or lasts longer than 7 days

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7
Q

permanent AF

A

longstanding AF, usually persisting for more than 1 year despite treatment

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8
Q

lone AF

A

-AF arising in a structurally normal heart without a precipitant

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9
Q

acute AF

A

-any subtype of AF within the first 24 hrs of onset, be it persistent, permanent or paroxysmal

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10
Q

risk factors for AF

A
  • Obstructive Sleep Apnea
  • Obesity
  • Long standing HTN / CHF/Ischemic Heart Dz
  • Valvular Heart Disease -especially L-sided (mitral regurgitation and mitral stenosis)
  • Cardiac surgery
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Genetic predisposition
  • Dehydrating factors: Viral illness, colonoscopy prep, cancer (chemotherapy), Alcohol- binge drinking “holiday heart”
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11
Q

AF and stroke risk

A

4-5x inc risk of stroke

3x inc risk of heart failure

2x inc risk of dementia

50% inc risk of death in men, nearly 100% in women

AF strokes more disabling and more often fatal, more likely to recur

Pathology: Thrombus formation in the left atrial appendage (LAA)

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12
Q

treatment of AF

A

Primary Goals:

1) Prevent embolic stroke through anticoagulation
2) Prevent cardiac damage through heart rate control
3) Back to normal when necessary

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13
Q

assessment of stroke risk

A

1) CHADS2VASC Score (most validated)
2) LV function / LA size & function (cardiology)

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14
Q

assessment of bleeding risk

A

1) HASBLEED 2) HEMORR2HAGES

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15
Q

CHADS2VASc score

A

C - CHF (1)

H - HTN (>140/90) (1)

A - Age >/= 75 (2)

D - Diabetes mellitus (1)

S2 - prior TIA or stroke (2)

V - vascular disease (MI, aortic plaque, etc.) (1)

A - Age 65-74 (1)

Sc - Sex category (female = 1)

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16
Q

Anticoagulation guidelines

A
17
Q

HAS-BLED

A

H - hypertension (1)

A - abnormal liver or renal function (1 or 2)

S - stroke (1)

B - bleeding (1)

L - Labile INR (1)

E - elderly (age >65) (1)

D - drugs or alcohol (1 or 2)

18
Q

goals of anticoagulation

A

To prevent embolic stroke by reducing thrombus burden in the heart LAA

NOTE: serious bleeding risk & must be used carefully!

19
Q

VKA - warfarin

A

(standard of care) - Titrated to an INR 2-3

PROS: cheap

CONS: Blood tests, DDIs, food interactions (vitamin K), reversal is not that simple!

20
Q

Xa inhibitors and IIa inhibitors: benefits and contraindication

A

Benefits:

1) NO blood testing
2) NO food interaction (Vitamin K does not affect)
3) Less drug interactions
4) Safer bleeding profile (all have less ICH than Warfarin)

CONTRAINDICATIONS:

-mechanical valve replacement / severe mitral stenosis / ESRD

21
Q

Factor Xa inhibitors

A

1) Xarelto (rivaroxaban) – ROCKET-AF (CHADS2- 3.5)

15, 20 mg once daily with dinner

Non-inferior to VKA

2) Eliquis (apixaban) – ARISTOTLE (CHADS2 2.1)
2. 5, 5 mg twice daily

Low risk of bleeding

Mortality benefit

3) Savaysa (edoxaban)- ENGAGE AF (CHADS2 2.8)

30, 60 mg once daily

¡

22
Q

Direct thrombin (IIa) inhibitor

A

Pradaxa (dabigatran) – Re-ly Study (CHADS2 2.1)

75, 150 mg BID

Superior for ischemic CVA prevention

High risk of GI bleeding

Dyspepsia

23
Q

RACE and AFFIRM trials

A

Rate control strategy NOT inferior to rhythm control in pts w/ persistent AF w/ regard to morbidity, mortality & QOL

  1. Target average heart rate
    - lenient (RHR <110bmp) vs. strict (<80bpm)
  2. Titrate meds to lower rate based on symptoms (70-90 bpm)
  3. Difficulty of preventing rapid ventricular response (RVR) with exertion
24
Q

Rate control

A

1)Beta-Blockers – Most effective class!

Cardioselective- Bisoprolol, Metoprolol, Carvedilol, Nebivolol

2) Non-Dihydropyridine CCBs (aka cardio-selective)

Diltiazem, Verapamil

3) Digoxin – may add synergistic rate control w/ above meds

No effect on BP (CHF patients)

4) Pacemaker + AV Nodal Ablation

Last resort

25
Q

When do we have to attempt rhythm conversion?

A

1) Unstable patient in emergent setting
2) When comorbidities destabilize a patient
ex: HF, CAD patient with unstable angina

26
Q

when should we consider rhythm control?

A

1) Symptomatic AF despite good rate control
2) Difficult to control rate
3) pts who developed tachycardia-mediated cardiomyopathy
2) Younger active patient
3) Small left atrial size

27
Q

rhythm conversion

A

1) Electrical Cardioversion w/TEE- echocardiogram of heart with a probe placed in the esophagus (great view of LAA)
2) Chemical Cardioversion - Anti-arrhythmic Rx – select carefully
- consider underlying cardiac dz & comorbidities
- consider pro-arrhythmic & toxic potential
3) Transvenous catheter ablation – radiofrequency & cryotherapy on pulmonary veins

28
Q

antiarrhythmics

A

Outpatient

Onset unknown- patient must be anticoagulated for at least 4 weeks

Onset known- within 48 hours no TEE needed

Most common agent is Amiodarone

1) High success of conversion back to sinus rhythm
2) Safe for all types of patients in terms of EF / valvular issues
3) Short term use only due to toxicity – thyroid, liver, lung

29
Q

radiofrequency ablation

A

Procedure

1) Percutaneous, radiofrequency catheter (cryo or heat)
2) Disrupts the propagation of electrical current
3) Pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) or wide area circumferential ablation (WACA)
4) Difficult procedure (60-70% success on first attempt)
5) More medications before and after procedure
6) Anticoagulation may be needed for extended period

30
Q

Surgical/procedural reduction of AF/CVA risk

A

1) Surgical MAZE

Incisions that are sewn together to disrupt re-entry currents (oldest)

2) LA Appendage Ligation / Closure
a) Surgical ligation / closure
b) WATCHMAN device – seals opening (cath based) (1:26)
c) LARIAT procedure- lasso close LAA through chest w/ guidewire system

31
Q

atrial flutter

A

1) Supraventricular re-entry tachycardia (“saw-tooth pattern”, fast regular)
2) Treated similar to AF

Anticoagulation, rate control

3) Rhythm control

Consider early cardioversion, does not respond well to meds

4) Atrial flutter Ablation

Technically much easier than AF

High success rate (~97%)

32
Q

afib algorithm

A

1) Anticoagulation (CHADS2VASC vs bleeding risk)?
2) Rate control (less than 110 bpm to prevent heart damage, push lower if still symptomatic)
3) Consider rhythm conversion based on continued symptomatic AF despite adequate rate control or confounding comorbidities (CHF, CAD)