Atrial Fibrillation Flashcards

1
Q

AF is the most common sustained cardiac arrythmia. T/F?

A

True

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2
Q

What is the major risk with AF?

A

Stroke

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3
Q

What are the possible symptoms of AF?

A
Palpitations
Dyspnoea
Chest pain
Syncope
Complications such as stroke
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4
Q

On examination how is the pulse in a patient with AF classically described?

A

Irregularly irregular

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5
Q

What test is used to confirm an irregularly irregular pulse as AF?

A

ECG

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6
Q

AF can be paroxysmal or persisting. T/F?

A

True

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7
Q

Why might ambulatory ECG be required to diagnose AF?

A

AF can. be paroxysmal

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8
Q

What signs of AF will be seen on ECG?

A

Irregularly irregular heart rate
Narrow QRS complexes
No P waves

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9
Q

‘Saw-tooth’ electrical activity on an ECG is characteristic of…?

A

Atrial flutter

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10
Q

Other than ECG, what tests should be conducted for AF?

A

TFTs
LFTs
Echocardiogram

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11
Q

What conditions can predispose to AF?

A
Hypertension
Symptomatic heart failure
Valvular heart. disease
Cardiomyopathies
Atrial septal defect / other congenital defect
Coronary artery disease
Thyroid dysfunction
Obesity
Diabetes mellitus
COPD
Sleep apnoea
Chronic renal disease
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12
Q

What are the objectives of treatment in AF?

A
Prevention of stroke
Relief of symptoms
Management of concomitant CVD
Control heart rate
Possibly also control heart rhythm
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13
Q

What is the target heart rate for patients with AF?

A

<110/min

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14
Q

If symptomatic, what is the target heart rate for patients with AF?

A

<80/min

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15
Q

What are the major risk. factor for stroke in AF patients?

A

Previous stroke
TIA or systemic embolism
Age >75 years

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16
Q

What are the minor risk. factor for stroke in AF patients?

A
CHF or moderate to severe LV systolic. dysfunction
Hypertension
Diabetes mellitus
Female. sex
Age 65-74
Vascular disease
17
Q

Risk factors for stroke in AF patients are collated via which scoring system?

A

CHADS-VAS

18
Q

How are patients with AF treated to. prevent stroke?

A

Anticoagulation - warfarin or DOACS

19
Q

Which AF patients should be referred for specialist assessment?

A

Still symptomatic despite adequate rate control
Young age <60
Inadequate rate control despite beta blocker/clacium antagonist and digoxin
Structural heart disease on echo
AF and coexisting herat failure

20
Q

What medications are used for the symptomatic management of AF?

A

Beta blocker or calcium. antagonist

Digoxin

21
Q

For which AF patients I rhythm control particularly important?

A

Younger patients

Ongoing symptoms despite good rate control

22
Q

What are the options for rhthym control in AF patients?

A

Direct current cardioversion
Antiarhthymics
Catheter ablation

23
Q

What potential side effect of amiodarone can, in itself, cause AF?

A

Thyroid dysfunction

24
Q

What antiarrhthymic drugs can be used to treat AF?

A

Sodium channel blockers (flecainide, propafenone)
Potassium channel blockers (sotalol, amiodarone)
Multi-channel blockers (dronedarone)

25
Q

What is the most effective management for rhthym control in AF patients with structurally normal hearts or minimal heart disease?

A

Catheter ablation