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Atrial Fibrillation
What is atrial fibrillation
(AF)?
Atrial
fibrillation is a disorder found in about 2.2 million
Americans. During atrial fibrillation, the heart's
two small upper chambers (the atria) quiver instead
of beating effectively. Blood isn't pumped completely
out of them, so it may pool and clot. If a piece of a
blood clot in the atria leaves the heart and becomes
lodged in an artery in the brain, a stroke results.
About 15 percent of strokes occur in people with atrial
fibrillation.
The likelihood of developing
atrial fibrillation increases with age. Three
to five percent of people over 65 have atrial
fibrillation.
How is atrial fibrillation
treated?
Several approaches are
used to treat and prevent abnormal beating:
- Medications are used to slow down rapid heart rate
associated with AF. These treatments may include drugs
such as digoxin, beta blockers (atenolol, metoprolol,
propranolol), amiodarone, disopyramide, calcium
antagonists (verapamil, diltiazam), sotalol,
flecainide, procainamide, quinidine, propafenone, etc.
- Electrical cardioversion may be used to restore
normal heart rhythm with an electric shock, when
medication doesn't improve symptoms.
- Drugs (such as ibutilide) can sometimes restore
the heart's normal rhythm. These drugs are given under
medical supervision, and are delivered through an IV
tube into a vein, usually in the patient's arm.
- Radiofrequency ablation may be effective in some
patients when medications don't work. In this
procedure, thin and flexible tubes are introduced
through a blood vessel and directed to the heart
muscle. Then a burst of radiofrequency energy is
delivered to destroy tissue that triggers abnormal
electrical signals or to block abnormal electrical
pathways.
- Surgery can be used to disrupt electrical
pathways that generate AF.
- Atrial pacemakers can be implanted under the skin
to regulate the heart rhythm.
AHA Recommendation for Stroke
Prevention
Treating atrial fibrillation is an important way to help
prevent stroke. That's why the American Heart
Association recommends aggressive treatment of this
heart arrhythmia.
Drugs are also used to help
reduce stroke risk in people with AF.
Anticoagulant and antiplatelet medications thin the
blood and make it less prone to clotting. Warfarin
is the anticoagulant now used for this purpose, and
aspirin is the antiplatelet drug most often used.
Long-term use of warfarin in patients with AF and
other stroke risk factors can reduce stroke by 68
percent.
- Physicians differ on the choice of drugs to
prevent embolic stroke — stroke caused by a
blood clot. It's clear that warfarin is more effective
against this type of stroke than aspirin. However,
warfarin has more side effects than aspirin. Examples
include potential bleeding problems or ulcer.
- Patients at high risk for stroke should probably
be treated with warfarin rather than aspirin unless
there are clear reasons not to do so.
- Aspirin is the standard treatment for patients at
low risk for stroke and under 75 years of age.

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