Title: Suvremena Terapija Atrijalne Fibrilacije Kantonalna Bolnica Zenica
1Suvremena Terapija Atrijalne Fibrilacije
Kantonalna Bolnica Zenica
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3Atrial fibrillation (AF), an old arrhythmia
first described in 1909,
- has assumed increasing importance in the 21st
century, in which the global demographic tide has
resulted in a rapidly expanding elderly
population. - AF is considered to be one of the three growing
CV epidemics in the 21st century in conjunction
with congestive heart failure (CHF), and type II
diabetes mellitus, and/or metabolic syndrome.
Moreover, AF and CHF frequently co-exist and each
may exert an adverse prognostic impact upon the
other.
4Background
- Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most prevalent
sustained cardiac arrhythmia in developed
countries. -
- It is a disease of the elderly and it is common
in patients (pts) with organic heart disease. - Hypertension, DM, heart failure and valvular
heart disease are predisposing factors to AF.
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6Sex and Age Distribution of pts with AF
Abdovic et al. Europace 2005
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8Etiological distribution of pts with AF
Abdovic E. et al. Europace, 2005
9Results
Abdovic et al. Europace 2005
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11Transitory vs. Chronic AF
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13Prevalence of AF in several major CHF trials
The interrelations between AF and CHF could
constitute a vicious cycle. However, both
conditions may be markers of a common
pathophysiological substrate. According to data
from the Framingham Heart Study, AF preceded CHF
about as often as CHF preceded AF, and in
one-fifth of subjects, AF and CHF were diagnosed
for the first time on the same day.
14The future of atrial fibrillation therapy the
2nd AFNET/EHRA consensus conference
- Three main areas in need of research were
identified - Understanding the mechanisms of AF
- Improving rhythm control monitoring and
management - Validation and implementation of comprehensive
cardiovascular risk management in AF patients - The expectation was that, in the future, adequate
therapy for AF will need to simultaneously
address - management of underlying and concomitant
diseases, - early and comprehensive rhythm control therapy,
- adequate control of ventricular rate and cardiac
function, - continuous therapy to prevent AF-associated
complications
15General schema representing AF mechanisms and the
role of remodeling
16"trigger" factor
- In the presence of an opportunely modulated
substrate, a prerequisite for the triggering of a
multiple atrial reentry is the presence of an
adequate "trigger" factor - This is represented, in most cases, by ectopic
atrial beats, commonly originating in the
pulmonary veins...
17Autonomic modulation preceding the onset of
atrial fibrillationMaisel et al. JACC
- Among patients with structurally normal hearts,
some have observed an increase in vagal
predominance in the minutes preceding AF onset,
while others have noted a marked shift towards
sympathetic predominance - A number of other studies have also demonstrated
that fluctuations in autonomic tone, as measured
by HRV, precede the onset of AF - Acetylcholine shortens the atrial refractory
period and increases the heterogeneity of atrial
refractoriness, effects that predispose to
reentry
18vns - af
- This survey shows that an autonomic trigger
pattern for AF may be found in over 20 of
patients. These patients are highly symptomatic
explaining the more frequent application of
rhythm control... - adrenergic (exercise, emotion, daytime only)
- vagal (postprandial, sleep, night time only)
19Fibrosis is a hallmark of arrhythmogenic
structural remodeling
- The fundamental mechanisms underlying AF have
long been debated, but electrical, contractile,
and structural remodeling are each important
synergistic contributors to the AF substrate. - In the dog model, atrial fibrosis causes
localized regions of conduction slowing,
increasing conduction heterogeneity and providing
an AF substrate - Fibrosis is a hallmark of arrhythmogenic
structural remodeling. Tissue fibrosis results
from an accumulation of fibrillar collagen
deposits, occurring most commonly as a reparative
process to replace degenerating myocardial
parenchyma with concomitant reactive fibrosis,
which causes interstitial expansion.
20Moes theory the multiple reentry wavelet
hypothesisMoe GK. On the multiple wavelet
hypothesis of atrial fibrillation.Arch Int
Pharmacodyn Ther 19621401838.
- ... has served for nearly 50 years as a dominant
conceptual model for explanation of the
activation patterns and the maintenance of AF. - The hypothesis, initially demonstrated via
computer modeling, found experimental and
clinical support in humans with the therapeutic
efficacy of the Maze procedure
21A Proposed Model for the Pathogenesis of AF
- Experimental and clinical studies have shown that
AF is maintained by multiple reentrant wavelets
within the atrial muscle. - It has been estimated that a critical number of
wavelets (from 3 to 6) is necessary for
perpetuation of AF...
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23Single/Multi Level Disease of the Cardiac
Conduction System
Sinus node (Intra, inter) atrial level
? Intra- and inter-atrial blocks
? Atrio-ventricular blocks
Atrio-ventricular level Intra-ventricular level
? Intra-ventricular blocks
24Cardiac Conduction System
25P-wave duration is generally accepted as the most
reliable non-invasive marker of atrial conduction
and its prolongation has been associated with
history of AFPlatonov PG, Cardiol J. 2008,
15402-408
- Despite the advancements in pharmacological and
non-pharmacological management of atrial
fibrillation (AF) observed during last decades,
available treatment modalities and predictors of
their success are still far from optimal. - Understanding of pathophysiological mechanisms
underlying AF and assessment of atrial
electrophysiological properties using easily
available non-invasive diagnostic tools such as
surface ECG are essential for further improvement
of patient-tailored treatment strategies.
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28Efficacy of amiodarone compared with control for
the (A) prevention of sudden cardiac death, (B)
cardiovascular death, and (C) all-cause mortality
in patients with cardiomyopathy (Piccini JP et
al, 2009 E Heart J)
29 the future of antiarrhythmic therapy.
- classified the perspectives into 3 groups
- Atrial selective agents including vernakalant,
amiodarone congeners and particularly dronedarone
and others. - The latter group represents gap junction
blockers, serotonin receptor antagonists and
muscarinic receptor blockers. - Does dronedarone represent a progress in terms of
efficacy and safety? Yes referring to the recent
results of the ATHENA trial, which showed that
dronedarone decreased cardiovascular
hospitalisation by 26 per cent, the first AF
related hospitalisation by 46 per cent, all AF
related hospitalisation by 23per cent and
reduction of the number of days of
hospitalisation. This multichannel blocker
without iodine is the first antiarrhythmic agent
which reduced cardiovascular events and
cardiovascular mortality.
30Advantages and disadvantages of rate control
and rhythm control
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35Angiotensin II Antagonist Prevents Electrical
Remodeling in Atrial Fibrillation Nakashima H et
al. Circulation 20001012612.
- The inhibition of endogenous Ang II prevented
AERP shortening during rapid atrial pacing. - These results indicate for the first time that
Ang II may be involved in the mechanism of atrial
electrical remodeling and that the blockade of
Ang II may lead to the better therapeutic
management of human atrial fibrillation.
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43Mechanism of Cardioembolic Ischemic Stroke Caused
by Atrial Fibrillation
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45Stroke risk in patients with AFaccording to the
CHADS2 risk index. The colour coded bar graphs
indicate the appropriate antithrombotic treatment
strategy.
46New anticoagulants with mechanisms of action that
are different from vitamin K antagonists
- the novel factor IIa and Xa antagonists like
dabigatran and rivaroxaban, their mechanism of
action and presently available results. - In patients with atrial fibrillation, dabigatran
110 mg was associated with similar rates of
stroke and systemic embolism to warfarin, and
lower rates of major hemorrhage. Dabigatran 150
mg was associated with lower rates of stroke and
systemic embolism than warfarin, and similar
rates of major hemorrhage.
47Cumulative Hazard Rates for the Primary Outcome
of Stroke or Systemic Embolism, According to
Treatment Group.
48The Watchman Left Atrial Appendage Closure
DeviceThe device is a self-expanding nitinol
structure that is delivered percutaneously with
femoral venous access and transseptal technique
to the LAA. The device is positioned with the
use of angiography and TEE, and implantation is
performed in either a cardiac catheterization or
electrophysiology laboratory with the patient
under general anesthesia or conscious sedation.
49The Maze procedure Black lines delineate
surgical incisions in both the right and left
atria, encircling the pulmonary veins (PV) and
around the coronary artery sinus orifice. The
atrial appendages are also excluded.
50Diagram of the Sites of 69 Foci Triggering Atrial
Fibrillation in 45 Patients. Note the clustering
in the pulmonary veins, particularly in both
superior pulmonary veins. Numbers indicate the
distribution of foci in the pulmonary veins.
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52Overview of balloon based pulmonary vein
isolation techniques
53Radiofrequency catheter ablation of AF by
pulmonary vein isolation has emerged as an
important treatment modality.
- However, despite initial success, there is a
substantial recurrence rate. - In a high percentage, the reason for recurrence
is that pulmonary vein isolation is not complete
due to local recovery of conduction out of the
pulmonary veins. Re-ablation is then the method
of choice. - In other cases, it might be important to change
the underlying atrial substrate by identifying
regions with continuous fractionated atrial
electrograms which stand for regional fibrosis.
54 the outcome and complications of AF ablation.
- The difficulty of evaluating AF ablation comes
from the number of techniques used in ablation
procedures. - All the series comparing ablation to
pharmacological therapy have shown that the
percentage of patients treated with ablation in
sinus rhythm is superior (64 per cent) to medical
therapy (26 per cent) in their series, 89 per
cent versus 23 per cent. - The complications have an incidence which depends
on the center and the experience of the
operators. These complications concern the
vascular access, the trans-septal puncture and
the injury to the cardiac chambers. The risk of
death during the procedure is reported to be
around 0.1 per cent.
55Schematic depiction of different ablation
techniques targeting the lateral pulmonary veins
(PVs). (A) Simultaneous isolation of the
ipsilateral PVs by a long pointby-point
lesion encircling the antrum area of the lateral
PVs. (B) Single shot PV isolation using
aballoon shaped catheter aiming at the LIPV.
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57 the statement of international societies
concerning AF ablation and ablation guidelines
cannot include class A recommendation as
prospective comparative randomized trials are not
available.
- Registries such as the one conducted by Dr
Cappato are useful but the long term results are
difficult to evaluate with a registry. - The CABANA trial will cover this gap and will
randomize recent onset paroxysmal AF to
antiarrhythmic medications or to ablation, which
will include pulmonary vein isolation as a
minimum procedure. - The primary endpoint will be mortality and
secondary endpoints will include cardiovascular
death, hospitalizations, heart failure, cost and
quality of life.
58Conclusion(1)
- The classical risk factors for developing AF
include HA, diabetes mellitus, valvular disease,
ischaemic cardiomyopathy, CHF and thyroid
disease. - HHD was by far the most prevalent associated
medical condition. - Chronic AF was predominant in groups with
advanced cardiac remodeling such as DCM and VHD.
On the contrary to transient AF, it is a disease
of the elderly.
59Conclusion(2)
- In order to prevent or postpone the development
of AF an optimal treatment of hypertension and
diabetes mellitus is necessery - early and comprehensive rhythm control therapy,
- adequate control of ventricular rate and cardiac
function, - continuous therapy to prevent AF-associated
complications