In 2015, 74,093 African Americans died from Heart disease. This represented 23.5% of all deaths of African Americans in that year. Jay Harold’s post,”Treatments for Atrial Fibrillations: 4 Different Types Used,” highlights who needs treatment and the goals of this treatment.
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Treatment for atrial fibrillation1 (AF) depends on how often you have symptoms, how severe they are, and whether you already have heart disease. General treatment options include medicines, medical procedures, and lifestyle changes.
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Goals of Treatment
The goals of treating AF include:
- Preventing blood clots from forming, thus lowering the risk of stroke2.
- Controlling how many times a minute the ventricles contract. This is called rate control. Rate control is important because it allows the ventricles enough time to completely fill with blood. With this approach, the abnormal heart rhythm continues, but you feel better and have fewer symptoms.
- Restoring a normal heart rhythm. This is called rhythm control. Rhythm control allows the atria and ventricles to work together to efficiently pump blood to the body.
- Treating any underlying disorder that’s causing or raising the risk of AF—for example, hyperthyroidism (too much thyroid hormone).
Who Needs Treatment for Atrial Fibrillation?
People who have AF but don’t have symptoms or related heart problems may not need treatment. AF may even go back to a normal heart rhythm on its own. (This also can occur in people who have AF with symptoms.)
In some people who have AF for the first time, doctors may choose to use an electrical procedure or medicine to restore a normal heart rhythm.
Repeat episodes of AF tend to cause changes to the heart’s electrical system, leading to persistent or permanent AF. Most people who have persistent or permanent AF need treatment to control their heart rate and prevent complications.
Specific Types of Treatment
BLOOD CLOT PREVENTION
People who have AF are at increased risk for stroke. This is because blood can pool in the heart’s upper chambers (the atria), causing a blood clot to form. If the clot breaks off and travels to the brain, it can cause a stroke.
Preventing blood clots from forming is probably the most important part of treating AF. The benefits of this type of treatment have been proven in multiple studies.
Doctors prescribe blood-thinning medicines to prevent blood clots. These medicines include warfarin (Coumadin®), dabigatran, heparin, and aspirin.
People taking blood-thinning medicines need regular blood tests to check how well the medicines are working.
RATE CONTROL
Doctors can prescribe medicines to slow down the rate at which the ventricles are beating. These medicines help bring the heart rate to a normal level.
Rate control is the recommended treatment for most patients who have AF, even though an abnormal heart rhythm continues and the heart doesn’t work as well as it should. Most people feel better and can function well if their heart rates are well-controlled.
Medicines used to control the heart rate include beta blockers (for example, metoprolol and atenolol), calcium channel blockers (diltiazem and verapamil), and digitalis (digoxin). Several other medicines also are available.
RHYTHM CONTROL
Restoring and maintaining a normal heart rhythm is a treatment approach recommended for people who aren’t doing well with rate control treatment. This treatment also may be used for people who have only recently started having AF. The long-term benefits of rhythm control have not been proven conclusively yet.
Doctors use medicines or procedures to control the heart’s rhythm. Patients often begin rhythm control treatment in a hospital so that their hearts can be closely watched.
The longer you have AF, the less likely it is that doctors can restore a normal heart rhythm. This is especially true for people who have had AF for 6 months or more.
Restoring a normal rhythm also becomes less likely if the atria are enlarged or if any underlying heart disease worsens. In these cases, the chance that AF will recur is high, even if you’re taking medicine to help convert AF to a normal rhythm.
Medicines. Medicines used to control the heart rhythm include amiodarone, sotalol, flecainide, propafenone, dofetilide, and ibutilide. Sometimes older medicines—such as quinidine, procainamide, and disopyramide—are used.
Your doctor will carefully tailor the dose and type of medicines he or she prescribes to treat your AF. This is because medicines used to treat AF can cause a different kind of arrhythmia.
These medicines also can harm people who have underlying diseases of the heart or other organs. This is especially true for patients who have an unusual heart rhythm problem called Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome3.
Your doctor may start you on a small dose of medicine and then gradually increase the dose until your symptoms are controlled. Medicines used for rhythm control can be given regularly by injection at a doctor’s office, clinic, or hospital. Or, you may routinely take pills to try to control AF or prevent repeat episodes.
If your doctor knows how you’ll react to a medicine, a specific dose may be prescribed for you to take on an as-needed basis if you have an episode of AF.
Procedures. Doctors use several procedures to restore a normal heart rhythm. For example, they may use electrical cardioversion4 to treat a fast or irregular heartbeat. For this procedure, low-energy shocks are given to your heart to trigger a normal rhythm. You’re temporarily put to sleep before you receive the shocks.
Electrical cardioversion isn’t the same as the emergency heart-shocking procedure often seen on TV programs. It’s planned in advance and done under carefully controlled conditions.
Before doing electrical cardioversion, your doctor may recommend transesophageal echocardiography5 (TEE). This test can rule out the presence of blood clots in the atria. If clots are present, you may need to take blood-thinning medicines before the procedure. These medicines can help get rid of the clots.
Catheter ablation6 (ab-LA-shun) may be used to restore a normal heart rhythm if medicines or electrical cardioversion don’t work. For this procedure, a wire is inserted through a vein in the leg or arm and threaded to the heart.
Radio wave energy is sent through the wire to destroy abnormal tissue that may be disrupting the normal flow of electrical signals. An electrophysiologist usually does this procedure in a hospital. Your doctor may recommend a TEE before catheter ablation to check for blood clots in the atria.
Sometimes doctors use catheter ablation to destroy the atrioventricular (AV) node. The AV node is where the heart’s electrical signals pass from the atria to the ventricles (the heart’s lower chambers). This procedure requires your doctor to surgically implant a device called a pacemaker, which helps maintain a normal heart rhythm.
Research on the benefits of catheter ablation as a treatment for AF is still ongoing.
Another procedure to restore a normal heart rhythm is called maze surgery. For this procedure, the surgeon makes small cuts or burns in the atria. These cuts or burns prevent the spread of disorganized electrical signals.
This procedure requires open-heart surgery, so it’s usually done when a person requires heart surgery for other reasons, such as for heart valve disease (which can increase the risk of AF).
APPROACHES TO TREATING UNDERLYING CAUSES AND REDUCING RISK FACTORS
Your doctor may recommend treatments for an underlying cause of AF or to reduce AF risk factors. For example, he or she may prescribe medicines to treat an overactive thyroid, lower high blood pressure, or manage high blood cholesterol.
Your doctor also may recommend lifestyle changes, such as following a healthy diet, cutting back on salt intake (to help lower blood pressure), quitting smoking, and reducing stress.
Limiting or avoiding alcohol, caffeine, or other stimulants that may increase your heart rate also can help reduce your risk for AF.
Heart Disease is the #1 Killer of Black Americans
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Bibliography
- https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health-topics/atrial-fibrillation
- https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health-topics/stroke
- https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health-topics/wolff-parkinson-white-syndrome
- https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health-topics/cardioversion
- https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health-topics/transesophageal-echocardiography
- https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health-topics/catheter-ablation