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Atrial Fibrillation…in a Rush

By Dr. Alexander Jay PGY2


Basics

Atrial fibrillation is defined as an irregularly irregular rhythm, in which there are many irritable atrial foci firing all at once. Although many atrial foci are firing at once, the AV node is still at peak function and only allows a set number of beats to pass through (the ultimate “bouncer”). This leads to an undulating baseline on ECG and an irregular ventricular rhythm.

Definitions:

Paroxysmal: self-terminating (usually <48 hours)

Persistent: lasts >7 days or requires termination by cardioversion

Long Standing persistent: Lasts >1 year

Permanent: the decision has been made between the patient and provider to no longer pursure    a rate control strategy

**atrial fibrillation usually starts paroxysmal and becomes more and more frequent, and ultimately leads to permanent afib in most cases **

Causes:

Diagnosis

Primarily made by ECG, showing an irregularly irregular rhythm

**note the wavy, undulating baseline cause by the firestorm of angry atrial foci firing at all once, competing for a chance to go down the slide that is the AV node (who, like every summer waterpark slide employee makes you wait waaaay longer than you need to before letting you go through). Also note the absence of P waves, because there is no coordinated contraction because each atrial foci is being a little diva and vying for the spotlight, no team work here.

Workup:

Management

First things first…are they stable? No? Stop reading this and go grab your closest defibrillator and prepare for a SYNCHRONIZED cardioversion (no R on T phenomenon happening here). Consider starting with 150-200J. And please be nice and give a little pain medication/light sedation.

Some reasons to cardiovert:

If your patient is stable, this buys you some time to think about RATE vs RHYTHM control

Rate control:

Rhythm control

Management is primarily about SYMPTOM control and STROKE PREVENTION

STROKE PREVENTION

Disposition

Ok to DC home IF

Citations:

Cline, D., Ma, O., Meckler, G., Stapczynski, J., Tintinalli, J., & Yealy, D. (2016). Tintinalli’s emergency medicine: a comprehensive study guide (8th ed.). McGraw-Hill Education LLC.

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