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The use of Cardioversion to treat Atrial fibrillation in the Emergency Room of a Hospital

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The use of Cardioversion to treat Atrial fibrillation in the Emergency Room of a Hospital

The Management of Atrial fibrillation in the Emergency Room of a Hospital

Treatment of Patients with Atrial Fibrillation and guideline for Management in Emergency Room and Preadmission Travel in a Medevac

Atrial fibrillation is an increasingly common reason for presentation to the emergency department, representing nearly 0.5% of all such visits. Appropriate patient care must consider the relief of symptoms, the safety of discharge from the emergency department, the plan for follow-up care, and the use of resources. However, there is an excellent variation in the management of this condition, including the use of cardioversion.

Pluymaekers and colleagues now report in the Journal the results of the RACE 7 ACWAS randomized noninferiority trial involving 437 patients with recent-onset (<36 hours) atrial fibrillation who presented to 17 emergency departments in the Netherlands. The majority of the patients in this trial had a history of atrial fibrillation, but none had episodes that had lasted more than 48 hours. The patients were randomly assigned to undergo either immediate cardioversion (early-cardioversion group) or a wait-and-see approach with medication (delayed-cardioversion group). The primary endpoint was sinus rhythm at four weeks after the initial emergency department visit.

In the early-cardioversion group, approximately equal numbers of patients underwent electrical or pharmacologic cardioversion, with flecainide being the most commonly used agent in the latter approach. In the delayed-cardioversion group, rate-control medications were used to achieve a heart rate of fewer than 110 beats per minute and relief of symptoms. Then patients were discharged home, with an outpatient visit scheduled for the following day and referral for cardioversion (as close as possible to 48 hours after symptom onset) if there had been no resolution of atrial fibrillation.

At the 4-week evaluation, sinus rhythm (as determined on 12-lead electrocardiography [ECG]) was present in 91% of the patients in the delayed-cardioversion group and in 94% in the early-cardioversion group, findings that met the criteria for the noninferiority of the wait-and-see approach. In the delayed-conversion group, 69% of the patients had a spontaneous conversion, and 28% underwent cardioversion within 48 hours. In the early-cardioversion group, nearly 95% of the patients left the emergency department in sinus rhythm (16% after spontaneous conversion while waiting for the procedure and 78% after cardioversion). The median duration of the stay in the emergency department was 120 minutes in the delayed-cardioversion group and 158 minutes in the early-cardioversion group. There were no significant between-group differences in the patients’ quality of life6 or clinical outcomes at four weeks. Among the 335 patients for whom ambulatory ECG recordings were available, nearly a third had a recurrence of atrial fibrillation within four weeks, and the time until a first recurrence was similar in the two groups. Fewer than 2% of the patients required hospitalization, 7% required repeat visits to the emergency department because of atrial fibrillation, and cardiovascular complications occurred in 4%.

RACE 7 was a well-designed, and well-executed trial with results that can be applied to a sizable population since 30% of the patients with atrial fibrillation who presented to the emergency department at the two sites that maintained systematic screening logs ultimately was eligible to participate in the trial. Patients were excluded because they presented more than 36 hours after symptom onset (35% of the patients), they had episodes that lasted more than 48 hours (18%), or their condition was hemodynamically unstable (11%), along with multiple other individual and administrative reasons. The findings suggest that rate-control therapy alone can achieve immediate symptom relief in almost all eligible patients, with good quality of life and a low risk of complications, while facilitating rapid discharge from the emergency department. The trial’s inclusion criteria identified a large group of patients who had more than a two-thirds chance of a spontaneous return to sinus rhythm, in whom unnecessary cardioversions were averted. In this pragmatic trial, the wait-and-see strategy reduced the median length of stay in the emergency department to 2 hours, as compared with the 3 to 10 hours expected from observational studies.However, for these results to be broadly applicable, defined treatment algorithms7 and access to prompt follow-up are needed, which may not be practical in all settings.

The results of this trial greatly simplify the current controversy regarding the safety of cardioversion between 12 and 48 hours after the onset of atrial fibrillation. For most patients with recent-onset atrial fibrillation, the wait-and-see approach may become the preferred strategy, unless they have a history of persistent atrial fibrillation or there are barriers to implementing this approach. Early cardioversion remains an option for patients who have had atrial fibrillation for more than 36 hours if they are receiving long-term anticoagulation, have been classified as low risk on transesophageal echocardiography, or have a low risk of stroke and atrial fibrillation with a duration of 36 to 48 hours.8 Early cardioversion remains an option for any patient with hemodynamic instability.

Within one year after a visit to the emergency department for atrial fibrillation, 5 to 10% of patients will die from any cause, and 10 to 20% will have a stroke, embolism, or myocardial infarction or be hospitalized for heart failure.10 Although observational studies suggest that sinus rhythm at the time of discharge from the emergency department is associated with an improved prognosis, five such reports have confounding factors, since patients in sinus rhythm tend to be healthier. In RACE 7, cardiovascular complications were infrequent and similar in the two trial groups.

Since the early-cardioversion strategy did not significantly increase the rate of sinus rhythm at four weeks, it is implausible that such treatment would improve long-term outcomes, a finding that is consistent with the results comparing long-term rate control with pharmacologic rhythm control.11 However, the long-term prognosis can be improved with oral anticoagulation and risk-factor modification which can be initially addressed in the emergency department visit and then effectively managed with routine specialist follow-up. Therapy to prevent recurrent hospitalization for atrial fibrillation is another critical component of long-term care since most patients who present to the emergency department have recurrent atrial fibrillation. The management of atrial fibrillation in the emergency department is not only a sprint to eliminate symptoms and facilitate safe discharge but also the start of a marathon to improve long-term outcomes for patients.

Above Information is a useful resource for a Medical Escort who needs to manage and transport an Atrial Fibrillation patient from one hospital to another tertiary care center.

For Professional Medical escorts - Doctors and Nurses - Call us or Email us to schedule a transport on Commercial or Charter flights.

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