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Atrial fibrillation poses big risk for stroke

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    Anne Curtis discusses some of the medications used to treat patients with AF. Watch a video.

By ELLEN GOLDBAUM
Published: September 22, 2011

A cardiac condition called atrial fibrillation, the most common cardiac arrhythmia, can increase your risk of stroke by 500 percent. That’s why Anne B. Curtis, Charles and Mary Bauer Professor and chair of the Department of Medicine, is helping to raise public awareness of the condition in September through the Heart Rhythm Society’s AF Awareness Month.

Curtis, a past president of the society, is the national campaign’s Buffalo area spokesperson.

“Atrial fibrillation is a rapid and irregular heart rhythm that can cause the heart to beat erratically, sometimes as fast as 200 beats per minute,” she explains. “It’s the most common heart arrhythmia but, unfortunately, most people know very little about it.”

There are more than 2 million people in the U.S. who live with AF, and approximately 160,000 new cases are diagnosed each year.

Because AF can increase the risk of stroke by 500 percent—an enormous increase, Curtis says—it’s critical to know if you have it or are at risk for it.

Curtis says many patients end up being diagnosed with AF when they visit their doctors complaining of palpitations, shortness of breath, fatigue or exercise intolerance.

“But some patients have AF and don’t have any symptoms,” Curtis says, “which is why it’s critical to know who is at higher risk for it. For one thing, AF becomes more common as we get older. Anyone older than 60 years of age is automatically at higher risk for developing AF.”

Other risk factors include diabetes; hypertension; congestive heart failure or other types of cardiovascular disease; hyperthyroidism; chronic lung disease; sleep apnea; excessive alcohol consumption; and serious illness or infection.

Curtis suggests that those who have one of these conditions should discuss atrial fibrillation with their physician to see if an electrocardiogram should be performed. Once a diagnosis of AF is confirmed with an electrocardiogram, the patient can be treated with medications, which prevent stroke, slow the heart rate and keep the rhythm normal.

In addition to warfarin, the well-established, anti-stroke medication that requires blood testing to adjust the dose, Curtis says patients now have another alternative, the anticoagulant dabigatran, for prevention of stroke in certain patients with AF. Additional medications are being tested that soon may provide patients with additional options, she says.

Patients with recurring bouts of AF also can be treated with catheter ablation, a procedure that involves threading catheters up into the heart to the locations, usually in the pulmonary veins, where the atrial fibrillation impulses start, she says.

“We can burn around the openings of those veins and that prevents those impulses from getting into the heart and triggering AF,” she says.

This procedure can prevent further episodes of AF in certain patients, while in others, it acts as more of a way to help manage the condition. Patients may be less symptomatic or have better rhythm control with drugs that didn’t work previously.

Curtis is a key contributor to the guidelines on AF that are issued periodically by the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. Her contributions, along with those of her colleagues, provide health care providers with recommendations based on the most current research findings so that they can make the best treatment decisions for their patients.