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longer than 48 h.
longer than 48 h.
When acute AF produces hemodynamic instability in the form of angina pectoris, MI, shock, or pulmonary edema, immediate cardioversion should not be delayed to deliver therapeutic anticoagulation, but intravenous unfractionated heparin or subcutaneous injection of a low-molecular-weight heparin should be initiated before cardioversion by direct-current countershock or intravenous antiarrhythmic medication.
When acute AF produces hemodynamic instability in the form of angina pectoris, MI, shock, or pulmonary edema, immediate cardioversion should not be delayed to deliver therapeutic anticoagulation, but intravenous unfractionated heparin or subcutaneous injection of a low-molecular-weight heparin should be initiated before cardioversion by direct-current countershock or intravenous antiarrhythmic medication.
===Risk Factors for Stroke and Recommended Antithrombotic Therapy===
<table class="wikitable">
<tr class="v-firstrow"><th>Low Risk Factors</th><th>Moderate Risk Factors</th><th>High Risk Factors</th></tr>
<tr><td>Female gender</td><td>Age ≥ 75 years</td><td>Previous stroke, TIA or embolism </td></tr>
<tr><td>Age 65-74 years</td><td>Hypertension</td><td>Mitral stenosis</td></tr>
<tr><td>Coronary artery disease</td><td>Heart failure</td><td>Prosthetic heart valve</td></tr>
<tr><td>Thyrotoxicosis</td><td>LV ejection fraction ≤ 35%</td><td></td></tr>
<tr><td></td><td>Diabetes mellitus</td><td></td></tr>
</table>

Revision as of 17:51, 3 March 2014

Cardioversion upto7 Days

DrugClass of Recommendation/
Level of Evidence
Dosage
Agents with proven efficacy
DofetilideI A
Creatinine clearance(ml/min)Dose (mg)
>60500
40 to 60 250
20 to 40 125
<20Contraindicated
Flecainide I AOral: 200 to 300 mg
Intravenous: 1.5 to 3.0 mg/kg over 10 to 20 min
IbutilideI A 1 mg over 10 min; repeat 1 mg when necessary
PropafenoneI AOral: 600 mg
Intravenous: 1.5 to 2.0 mg/kg over 10 to 20 min
AmiodaroneIIa AOral:
Inpatient: 1.2 to 1.8 g per day in divided dose until 10 g total
then 200 to 400 mg per day maintenance or 30 mg/kg as single dose
Outpatient: 600 to 800 mg per day divided dose until 10 g total
then 200 to 400 mg per day maintenance.

Intravenous:

5 to 7 mg/kg over 30 to 60 min then 1.2 to 1.8 g per day continuous IV or
in divided oral doses until 10 g total then 200 to 400 mg per day maintenance.

Cardioversion after 7 Days

DrugClass of Recommendation/
Level of Evidence
Dosage
DofetilideI A
Creatinine clearance(ml/min)Dose (mg)
>60500
40 to 60 250
20 to 40 125
<20Contraindicated
AmiodaroneIIa AOral:
Inpatient: 1.2 to 1.8 g per day in divided dose until 10 g total
then 200 to 400 mg per day maintenance or 30 mg/kg as single dose
Outpatient: 600 to 800 mg per day divided dose until 10 g total
then 200 to 400 mg per day maintenance.

Intravenous:

5 to 7 mg/kg over 30 to 60 min then 1.2 to 1.8 g per day continuous IV or
in divided oral doses until 10 g total then 200 to 400 mg per day maintenance.
IbutilideIIa A1 mg over 10 min; repeat 1 mg when necessary

Drugs which enhance the efficacy of cardioversion when given prior to the procedure: (Level of recommendation: IIa B)

  • Amiodarone
  • Flecainide
  • Ibutilide
  • Propafenone
  • Sotalol

Drug Dosages for Maintenance of Sinus Rhythm

Following table summarizes the list of most commonly used drugs and their dosages for maintenance of sinus rhythm:

DrugDose
Amiodarone100 to 400 mg
Disopyramide400 to 750 mg
Dofetilide5000 to 1000 mcg
Flecainide200 to 300 mg
Procainamide1000 to 4000 mg
Propafenone450 to 900 mg
Quinidine600 to 1500 mg
Sotalol 160 to 320 mg

Pharmacological Agents for Heart Rate Control

DrugClass/LOE
Recommendations
Loading DoseMaintenance Dose
Acute Setting
Heart rate control in patients without accessory pathway
EsmololI C500 mcg/kg IV over 1 min60 to 200 mcg/kg/min IV
PropanololI C 0.15 mg/kg IVNA
MetoprololI C 2.5 to 5 mg IV bolus over 2 min; up to 3 dosesNA
DiltiazemI B0.25 mg/kg IV over 2 min5 to 15 mg/h IV
VerampilI B0.075 to 0.15 mg/kg IV over 2 minNA
Heart Rate Control in patients with accessory pathway
AmiodaroneIIa C150 mg over 10 min0.5 to 1 mg/min IV
Heart Rate Control in patients with heart failure and without accessory pathway
DigoxinI B0.25 mg IV each 2 h, up to 1.5 mg0.125 to 0.375 mg daily IV or orally
AmiodaroneIIa C150 mg over 10 min0.5 to 1 mg/min IV
Non-Acute Setting and Chronic Maintenance Therapy
Heart rate control
MetoprololI CSame as maintenance dose25 to 100 mg twice a day, orally
PropanololI CSame as maintenance dose80 to 240 mg daily in divided doses, orally
VerampilI BSame as maintenance dose120 to 360 mg daily in divided doses; slow release available, orally
DiltiazemI BSame as maintenance dose120 to 360 mg daily in divided doses; slow release available, orally
Heart Rate Control in patients with heart failure and without accessory pathway
Digoxin I C0.5 mg by mouth daily0.125 to 0.375 mg daily, orally
AmiodaroneIIb C800 mg daily for 1 wk, orally
600 mg daily for 1 wk, orally
400 mg daily for 4 to 6 wk, orally
200 mg daily, orally

CHADS2Scoring for Predicting Risk of Stroke

Condition Points
 C   Congestive heart failure
1
 H  Hypertension: blood pressure consistently above 140/90 mmHg
(or treated hypertension on medication)
1
 A  Age >/=75 years
1
 D  Diabetes Mellitus
1
 S2  Prior Stroke or TIA
2
Score Risk Anticoagulation Therapy Considerations
0 Low Aspirin Aspirin daily
1 Moderate Aspirin or Warfarin Aspirin daily or INR to 2.0-3.0, depending on factors such as patient preference
2 or greater Moderate or High Warfarin INR to 2.0-3.0, unless contraindicated (e.g. clinically significant GI bleeding, inability to obtain regular INR screening)

Anticoagulation is recommended for 3 wk prior to and 4 wk after cardioversion for patients with AF of unknown duration or with AF for longer than 48 h. When acute AF produces hemodynamic instability in the form of angina pectoris, MI, shock, or pulmonary edema, immediate cardioversion should not be delayed to deliver therapeutic anticoagulation, but intravenous unfractionated heparin or subcutaneous injection of a low-molecular-weight heparin should be initiated before cardioversion by direct-current countershock or intravenous antiarrhythmic medication.

Risk Factors for Stroke and Recommended Antithrombotic Therapy

Low Risk FactorsModerate Risk FactorsHigh Risk Factors
Female genderAge ≥ 75 yearsPrevious stroke, TIA or embolism
Age 65-74 yearsHypertensionMitral stenosis
Coronary artery diseaseHeart failureProsthetic heart valve
ThyrotoxicosisLV ejection fraction ≤ 35%
Diabetes mellitus