atrial fibrillation management

16
Acute Management of Atrial Fibrillation Dalia Hawwass PGY2 June 2015

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ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT. MINI-LECTURE. OBJECTIVES. REVIEW INITIAL MANAGEMENT OF AFIB; MEDICAL VS CARDIOVERTING MEDICAL MANAGEMENT: RATE VS RHYTHM CONTROL ROLE OF ANTICOAGULATION. CASE VIGNETTE. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Acute Management of Atrial Fibrillation

Dalia Hawwass PGY2June 2015

Page 2: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Objectives

• To review the initial management of atrial fibrillation with RVR in acute setting

• Assessment for hemodynamic instability

• Indications for urgent cardioversion

• Different Rate Control agents

Page 3: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Case Vignette

• A 75 year old woman with PMHx of HTN, HLD and DM, CKD presents to ED for new onset dizziness, shortness of breath and palpitations that began 3 hours ago while patient was gardening in her lawn. She denies any associated chest pain and no actual loss of consciousness.

• Vital Signs: T: 37.5 C, BP 90s/60s (Baseline BP 115/80s), HR 140s-160s bpm and RR 24. A&O x3 with some facial grimmace. Cardiac exam is irregulary irregular without murmurs. Lungs CTAB. Remainder of exam unremarkable.

• She received a 2L bolus in the ED without increase in blood pressure

Page 4: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

EKG

Page 5: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

What is the next appropriate

management for this patient?

• A) IV diltiazem

• B) Intubation

• C) Urgent Cardioversion

• D) IV pain control

• E) CT pulmonary angiogram

Page 6: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Indications for Urgent Direct

Cardioversion

• Hemodynamic Instability:• Patient with decompensated heart

failure• Active ischemia: if symptomatic with

angina or evidence of ischemia/infarction on EKG

• Evidence of organ hypoperfusion (altered mental status, cold clammy skin, acute kidney injury)

Page 7: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Urgent Cardioversion

• Electrical Cardioversion: sedate patient and place setting on direct synchronization then shock• Initial shock setting of 100J 200J 300J 360J until

sinus rhythm returns

• Make sure you perform direct cardioversion with R wave synchronization to prevent an “R on T” phenomenon which can lead to V fib

• Restoration of normal sinus rhythm takes precedence over need for protection from thromboembolic risk

• Would recommend cardiology consult at this time

Page 8: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

If Patient is Hemodynamically

Stable• Goal is ventricular rate control (<100 bpm) and anticoagulation

• Resting HR goal should be 60-85 bpm in symptomatic patient

• Roughly 50% of patients with new onset AF will spontaneously convert to NSR spontaneously within 48 hours of onset

• Rate control or Rhythm control? • AFFIRM trial and RACE trial

• No survival advantage in terms of stroke prevention rhythm control over rate control rate control

• Rate control agents• Calcium Channel Blockers • Beta blockers (caution in patients with reactive airway disease)• Digoxin• Amiodarone (for patients intolerant or unresponsive to other

agents)

Page 9: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Rate Control AgentsDrug Classes Drug Loading

DoseMaintenance Dose

Calcium Channel Blockers (non-dihydropyridine)-initial DOC

Diltiazem 10 mg IV over 2 minutesCan repeat up to 20 mg IV

30 mg PO q6 hrs (can transition to long acting)Can use 10 mg IV q6 hrs prn

Beta Blockers-initial DOC

Metoprolol 5 mg IVP q5min x3 doses

25 mg PO BID, can uptitrate to 100mg PO BID

OtherDigoxin 0.5 mg IV

loading dose0.25mg IV in 6 hrs0.25mg IV 6 hrs after

0.125 mg PO QD

Other Amiodarone 150 mg IV/10 min 1mg/minx 6 hrs 0.5 mg/min x 18hrs

100-200 mg PO QD

Page 10: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Rate Control Agents

Calcium Channel blockers-non-dihydropyridine agents

• IV diltiazem-initial dose 10 mg IV over 2 minutes

• Can increase dose to 20mg IV if needed• Maintenance diltiazem 30mg PO q6hrs (short

acting) or can transition to total long acting diltiazem

• Can also use 10mg IVP q6 hrs prn

• Start PO dose at same time as IV dosing, so PO can kick in by time IV dosing wears off

Page 11: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Rate Control Agents

Beta blockers• Metoprolol- Initial dose: 5mg IVP q5 minutes x3

doses and q6hrs prn • Maintenance Dose: 25 mg PO BID, can uptitrate to

100mg PO BID max• Start PO at same time as IV medication

• Esmolol –Initial dose: 500mcg/kg IV over 1 min, can repeat in 5 minutes

• Maintenance drip: 50-300 mcg/kg per min IV continuous infusion

• Used only in ICU: • Advantage: short duration of action, easy to titrate to

heart rate goal

Page 12: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Rate Control Agents

Digoxin can be used in acute setting but rarely as monotherapy

• Initial loading dose: 0.5mg IVthen 0.25mg IV in 6 hrs0.25 mg IV 6 hours after

• Maintenance dose: 0.125mg daily PO• Caution in elderly patients and those with

renal failure (need to renally dose)• TREAT-AF study-increased risk in mortality in

elderly patients by >20% on digoxin

• Indicated in patients with LVEF<30% (inotropic agent)

Page 13: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Rate Control Agents

Amiodarone- both a rate control and rhythm control agent

• Initial loading dose: 150 mg IV over 10 minutes, then 1 mg/min x 6 hrs, then 0.5mg/min x18 hrs

• Maintenance dose: can change to oral 100mg-200mg daily

• Can promote cardioversion-so need to be on anticoagulation

• Preferred agent in WPW to prevent AF impulses down accessory pathway leading to promotion of VF

Page 14: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Case Revisited

What is the next appropriate management for this patient?

A) IV diltiazemB) Intubation C) Urgent CardioversionD) IV pain controlE) CT pulmonary angiogram

Page 15: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

Summary

• If patient is hemodynamically unstable in setting of atrial fibrillation (with hypotension, angina, decompensated heart failure, AMS) then proceed with direct synchronized cardioversion

• Rate control is goal for Afib with RVR for symptomatic management

• Initial rate control agents are diltiazem or metoprolol

Page 16: ATRIAL FIBRILLATION MANAGEMENT

References

• Uptodate.com: Topics: Acute Management of Atrial Fibrillation

• Uptodate.com: Topics: Rhythm Control vs Rate Control in Atrial Fibrillation

• January, Craig T. et al. “2014 AHA/ACC/HRS Guideline for Management of Patient with Atrial Fibrillation: Executive Summary." Journal of American College of Cardiology (2014): n. pag. American College Cardiology Foundation. Web. 29 Sept. 2014. http://content.onlinejacc.org/article.aspx?articleid

• wmshp.org/sg_userfiles/Sarigianis_CE_10172013_handout.pptx

• King, D, Dickerson, Sack J. Acute Management of Atrial Fibrillation: Part I. Rate and Rhythm Control. Am Fam Physician. 2002 Jul; 66(2): 249-257.