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Hjärtarytmiersjukdomshistoria och behandling Nils Edvardsson Normal sinusknutefunktion * intrinsic rate ** 90-120 slag/min (ex. denervering vid hjärttransplantation ** sjunker med åldern ** kronotropi – frekvensökning * autonom styrning ** vagus dominerar (avtar med åldern) *** vid max atropin HR 110-120 ** sympaticus *** vid max arbete HR 220 - åldern Sjuk sinusknuta – diagnostik * Förmaksbradyarytmi (paroxysmal eller generell) ** sinusbradycardi (<40 slag/min) ** sinus arrest (> 3 s) ** sino-atrialt block ** kronotrop insufficiens * Paroxysmala tachyarytmier ** oftast förmaksflimmer Sjuk sinusknuta – incidens, prevalens * svårbestämd - unga friska kan ha bradycardier, idrottsmän har ofta HR<40. * incidens ca 0.2% * ökar med åldern Symptom * specifika - syncope, yrsel, hjärtsvikt * ospecifika - trötthet, orkselöshet, apati, depression * hjärtklappning ** paroxysmala FF, FFl, andra tachycardier ** inappropriate sinus node tachycardia, IST ** trombembolism! ”Sinus node remodelling” * En inaktiv sinusknuta ”somnar in” ** fungerar inte normalt efter en tid ** kan ses övergående efter elkonvertering (riskperiod för proarytmi) ** avtagande sinusfrekvens - nodalrytm * Kronotrop insufficiens ** välbekant men ej lättdefinierat begrepp ** ”otillräcklig frekvensvariation i samband med fysisk ansträngning” AV-block * AV-block I (PR>0.22 s) * AV-block II:I (Wenchebach) ** oftast beläget I AV-noden (intra-nodalt) * AV-block II:II ** oftast beläget nedanför AV-noden (infranodalt) ** pacemakerindikation * AV-block III (oberoende förmaks- och kammarrytm) Vänstergrenblock - LBBB * alltid ett observandum - markör! * någon gång rest efter myokardit – i princip ofarligt om myokardiet friskt * vanligt vid allvarliga tillstånd som klaffel (aortastenos), VK-kardiomyopati, kranskärlssjukdom, VK-svikt, etc. LBBB V1 V6 V1 LBBB – normal electrical axis V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 LAH-block = extremt vänsterställd el-axel * QRS-komplexet ofta <120 ms * Vanligt hos äldre, avspeglar (lindrig) hjärtsjukdom hos ca 50% Enkel diagnostik: ** om R/S-kvoten är 0 eller negativ i II ** och mer negativ i III ** föreligger extremt vänsterställd el-axel (minst -30º) RBBB Högergrenblock - RBBB * vanligt med partiella RBBB, anomali, ”högersidigt intraventrikulärt ledningshinder” * hos yngre - tänk på ASD * hos äldre vanligare - ingen ökad risk Ovanligt men viktigt: högerkammarsjukdom, t.ex. ARVD (arytmogen högerkammardysplasi) Uttalat vänstersidigt intraventrikulärt ledningshinder * QRS >120 ms, oftast betydligt mer * uppfyller inte strikta kriterier för LBBB * betyder att konduktionen är drabbad mer perifert på grund av utbredd myokardskada Bifascikulärt block – BBBB * oftast RBBB+LAH, mycket sällan RBBB+LPH: * BBBB utan symptom: expektans * BBBB med yrsel/syncope: risk för AVblock III cirka 6% per år * BBBB+AV-block I: risk för AV-block III cirka 30% per år – pacemaker! Primary VF Monomorphic VT Moe Mirowski Appropriate shocks Behandling av VT/VF * Farmakologisk behandling kan vara riskabel, risk för proarytmi * Implanterbar defibrillator ** overdrive pacing vid VT ** shock vid snabb VT och VF * Shockreduktion (betablockad, amiodarone, sotalol) V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 921003 22 y, professional ice-hockey goalkeeper WPW-syndrome In total 5 procedures at three centres in the US before cured 921006 ♂ 19 y, soccer goalkeeper Palpitations during match, cured by RF ablation WPW syndrome Preexcitation in 0.1-0.3 ‰ in general population Tachyarrhythmias in about half of them High risk patients rare - multiple pathways - antidromic tachycardia - preexcited AF Sudden cardiac death very rare RF ablation is an effective cure WPW syndrome Left lateral pathway – RF ablation ♂23y, professional tennis player. AVNRT Paroxysmal tachycardias, before, but not enough to motivate treatment Had to give up an important match in 5th set when in winning position. Tachycardia started during game and stopped only after end of ”injury time” Cured by RF ablation AV nodal reentry tachycardia AVNRT 3 %o in general population Women:men 6:1 Fast pathway Palpitations, syncope, urina spastica Sudden onset, sudden offset Slow pathway Adenosin stops tachycardia by short block in AV node Heart rate during tachycardia (140) 180-240 bpm AVNRT - Slow pathway ablation HBE SC RF RV Efficacy >95% Patient cured for life 14 mån efter RF-ablation av AVNRT Startkänslan Maj 2004 AVNRT ♂ 23 y, soccer defender in elite division PP 380 ms EAT Ectopic atrial tachycardia, EAT * focal or reentry * intermittent or persistent * may cause LV dysfunction * can be life-threatening in children and young patients Start of atrial fibrillation P on T PAC PAC – atrial fibrillation Requisits for atrial fibrillation Regulator AV node Autonomic tone Trigger Premature atrial beats Bursts from pulmonary veins Bradycardia Terminator AF Initiator Perpetuator Spatial dispersion of refractory periods Short wave length Functional blocks Large atria Diseased areas Anatomical blocks Short wave length Short excitable gap Triggers Autonomic trigger patterns Euro Heart Survey, 1517 pts with paroxysmal AF De Vos et al., Eur Heart J 2008 Acute, paroxysmal AF Self-terminating <7d, mostly <48h Symptoms: palpitations, anxiety, dizziness etc Risk: depending on additional factors Treatment goal: symptom relief, eliminate or reduce attacks, reduce heart rate during attacks Strategy: rhythm control (and rate control), consider anticoagulation Persistent: duration >7d, will not stop spontaneously but can be converted. Long-standing persistent, duration > 1 year May be asymptomatic, little or very symptomatic: at rest?, on exertion? Risk: depending on additional risk factors Treatment goal: relief of symptoms, reduce risk Treatment: rhythm control (+ rate control) + antithrombotic treatment Permanent or ”accepted”: will not stop spontaneously and/or cannot be converted May be asymptomatic, little or very symptomatic: at rest?, on exertion? Risk: depending on comorbidity Treatment goal: relief of symptoms, reduce risk Treatment: rate control + antithrombotic treatment Atrial fibrillation Variable conduction via the AV node to the ventricles II Right atrium Left atrium Atrial rate 350-500 bpm Patient 1 51 years old, male, accountant with own company, two elder brothers with AF, while he himself is sofar healthy. PAF diagnosed one year ago after golf and whisky, propranolol (Inderal). Increasing number of episodes, almost always after tennis, skiing, golf, often starting during the night afterwards. Sotalol (Sotacor), better. Worse again, tested dispopyramide (Dirytmin), verapamil (Isoptin). More frequent episodes, longer duration, more easily starting, need for DC. Amiodarone (Coradrone). AF interfering with work. Patient 1 Finally very limited in his life, can not sport, can not participate in social life, no wine/whisky. Persistent AF alternating with self-terminating episodes. Ready for non-pharmacological treatment. Duration from first attack to heavily symptomatic, therapy resistant AF was 8 years. Page 1 and 7/10 Atrial flutter: more organized, one circuit, atrial rate 280 bpm, various degrees of blocked conduction to the ventricles, here 3:1 Occurs as an entity of its own but very often together with atrial fibrillation. Treated mainly in the same way but often difficult to treat pharmacologically. Ablation! ACC/AHA/ESC Guidelines for Management of Atrial Fibrillation Progression of AF Paroxysmal Persistent Permanent Sinus Rhythm DC Atrial Fibrillation AF is associated with increased morbidity and mortality Adjusted relative risk 3.5 Mortality 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0 Morbidity Stroke NonNonCV Total mortality stroke CV mortality mortality mortality mortality Stroke CHF MI Manitoba Heart Study; Am J Med 1995 AF- a problem growing with age U.S. population x 1000 Population with AF x 1000 Population with atrial fibrillation 30,000 500 400 20,000 300 U.S. population 200 10,000 100 0 <5 5- 10- 15- 20- 25- 30- 35- 40- 45- 50- 55- 60- 65- 70- 75- 80- 85- 90- >95 9 14 19 24 29 34 39 44 49 54 59 64 69 74 79 84 89 94 0 Age, yr Adapted from Feinberg WM. Arch Intern Med 1995;155:469-473 Atrial fibrillation – the future Adults with atrial fibrillation, in millions 7.0 6.0 5.0 4.78 5.16 5.42 5.61 4.34 4.0 3.80 3.33 3.0 2.0 2.94 2.08 2.26 2.44 2.66 1.0 0 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 Go et al., JAMA 2001 AF limits patients´ lifes “I‘d love to go skiing again. It makes me quite sad” (UK, parox) “I used to do all the housework but now…I feel unable…to look after my home” (Fr, Parox) “I like going out, going to parties… enjoying life…now I can’t” (Fr, perm) “When it was bad we couldn’t have sex” (Ge, pers) “Even just considering walking, it’s noticeable” (Fr, Parox) “Always worried …always scared about tomorrow” (F, parox) “No more sport, nothing…physically diminished. Heavy work, cycling, sport; all out of the question ” (Fr, Parox) “To cook, to have twelve people for dinner, I can’t do those things” (US, Perm) “In the short-term, I have trouble going up and down the stairs” (US, Parox) “Everything is an effort, I have no bounce” (Fr, Parox) ACC/AHA/ESC Guidelines for Management of Atrial Fibrillation Loss of atrial function Atrial pressure Atrial thrombus Embolism Congestion Dyspnea Cardiac output Fatigue Ventricular filling Stroke volume Rapid, irregular ventricular rate Cerebral blood flow Vertigo Coronary blood flow Angina pectoris Myocardial O2 demand Palpitations Cardiomyopathy Impact on symptoms Percentage of Atrial Fibrillation patients experiencing these symptoms Shortness of breath 60% Palpitations 53% Fatigue 41% Chest pain 25% Dizziness 23% Syncope 3% 0 10 20 30 40 50 NB! Asymptomatic episodes are more frequent than symptomatic, are short in duration and carry the same risk for stroke 60 Zimetbaum P et al., PACE 1999;22:782 ACC/AHA/ESC Guidelines for Management of Atrial Fibrillation Management of AF - Rationale Symptomatic relief Palpitations Dyspnea Fatigue Angina pectoris Prevention of late complications Embolic events Cardiomyopathy Prevention of progression of AF Atrial fibrillation - strategies Läkemedel och icke-farmakologisk behandling * farmakologisk behandling ** rytmkontroll ** frekvenskontroll ** antikoagulation * elkonvertering * icke-farmakologisk behandling ** His-ablation ** pacing ** kateterablation ** kirurgi ** intra-operativ ablation DC cardioversion, external, biphasic shocks, >80% success rate. General anaesthesia AF – pharmacological conversion Comments Class IC - flecainide - propafenone effective, little/no heart disease, short AF duration effective, little/no heart disease, short AF duration Class III - amiodarone - sotalol - ibutilide variable efficacy low efficacy, best post op. effective, also post op., proarrhythmia Vernakalant effective when AF duration <1 week Digoxin no proven efficacy AF6 - before and 2 w after DC Responders – SR at follow-up Q. Baseline 12±3 d 1 2 3 4 5 6 1,2 5,0 4,4 3,4 5,3 2,7 Andningsbesvär i vila Andningsbesvär vid ansträngning Begränsningar i det dagliga livet Obehagskänsla pga FF Trötthet pga FF Oro/ångest pga FF 1,0 3,2 2,1 1,5 2,5 1,8 Non-responders – did not have SR at follow-up Q. Baseline 12±3 d 1 Andningsbesvär i vila 2 Andningsbesvär vid ansträngning 3 Begränsningar i det dagliga livet 4 Obehagskänsla pga FF 5 Trötthet pga FF 6 Oro/ångest pga FF 0,8 3,9 2,3 1,8 3,7 1,5 0,9 3,6 2,9 1,9 3,1 1,6 Early relapse after DC cardioversion RAFT – propafenone SR vs. placebo * history of sympt. AF * ECG proof < 12 mo * SR at first dose of randomized medication * outpatient initiation * loading period d 1-4 * time to outcome event ** from day 1 ** from day 5 523 pts, mean age 63 years, >50% without structural heart disease. No deaths, no VT. Side effects leading to discontinuation: 13%, 13%, 14% and 25% Dizziness, dyspnoea, taste disturbance, fatigue, constipation Pritchett et al., Am J Cardiol 2003 Patients converted to SR within 3 months of onset are more likely to remain in SR Patients in sinus rhythm (%) 90 80 <3-month duration of atrial fibrillation prior to cardioversion 82% >12-month duration of atrial fibrillation prior to cardioversion 67% 70 60 50 36% 40 27% 30 20 10 0 1 month 6 months P<.02 P<.07 The longer one waits to initiate a rhythm-control strategy, the harder it is to regain sinus rhythm Dittrich HC et al. Am J Cardiol. 1989;63:193-197. Tid från insatt Waran till DC 545 patienter, första elkonverteringen B-M Abrahamsson, Sahlgrenska University Hospital Recommended and non-recommended treatment in a ”realworld” setting 2007 AF – maintenance of sinus rhythm Comments Class IA - disopyramide effective, limiting side effects Class IC - flecainide - propafenone Class III - amiodarone - dronedarone - sotalol - dofetilide effective, little/no heart disease effective, little/no heart disease effective, complex and dangerous side effects moderately effective, low risk effective, risk of proarrhythmia effective, risk of proarrhythmia Choice depending on underlying heart disease and risk of proarrhythmia. Various endpoints in studies (time to relapse; no in SR at 1 y etc.) Bazett´s formula 1918-20 QTc = QT (s) RR (s) Rate correction to heart rate 60 bpm. Over- and undercorrection at low-high heart rates. Measure at a mean heart rate of 60-80-(100) bpm!! Torsade de pointes Starts with late PVC, QRS complex twisting around axis, QT prolongation AF a progressive disease, treat early Paroxysmal n Age, y Time from first AF, mo Duration current AF, mo CAD, % Hypertension, % Valvular, % None, % Heart failure, % 167 66 39 NA 12 17 10 46 14 Chronic 389 70 66 54 18 22 20 23 43 ALFA study – subsets of atrial fibrillation in general practice in France Lévy et al, Circulation, 1999 Quality of warfarin treatment Interational Normalized Ratio Time in range (%) 100% >3.2 80% 60% 66% 81% 2.0-3.0 40% 20% <1.8 0% 3 6 9 12 15 18 Treatment duration (months) 21 CHADS2 score in patients with AF C H A D S congestive heart disease hypertension age <75 y diabetes TIA or stroke C, H, A, D ger en poäng vardera, S ger två poäng Andra risk scores under utvärdering, t.ex. CHA2DS2Vasc och HAS-BLED. Distribution of CHADS2 scores between 17097 women and 14724 men with stroke and AF % 40 women men 30 20 10 0 0 1 2 3 CHADS2 score 4 5 6 Pill in the pocket approach In-hospital evaluation 268 pts in the ER, , 59±11 y, recent onset AF propafenone 600 (450) mg OR flecainide 300 (200) mg orally Rhythm monitoring 8 h, BP every 30 min, ECG every h 58 patients excluded (treatment failure, side effects) Out-of-hospital treatment 210 pts, 165 (79%) had 618 recurrences 569 recurrences were treated 36±93 min after onset of symptoms. Success criterion: conversion <6h, no side effects. 534 episodes (94%) interrupted <6h * 16 episodes interrupted >6h, no emergency room contact * 26 episodes involved emergency room contact Time to resolution 113±84 min Alboni et al., NEJM 351:2384-2391; 2004 Upstream therapy: ACE-I and ARB Healey et al., JACC 2005 Upstream therapy: statins Fauchier et al., JACC 2008 Dronedarone - ATHENA * PAF or persistent AF * >=75 y, or <75 y + 1 risk factor * N=4628, mean age 72+-9 y, 47% females * Follow-up 21+-5 months * 25% in AF/Afl at randomization * Approx. 1/3 CAD, 1/5 history of CHF NYHA II-III, 4% had EF<35% * CV background medication – 71% betablockers, 70% ACE-I/ARB, 39% statins, 60% OAC Dronedarone - ATHENA Hohnloser et al., NEJM 2009 AV junctional ablation Before After Invasive procedure Destruction of the His bundle, intentional complete AV block Palliation, symptomatic treatment - does not cure Last resort in refractory patients Permanent pacemaker needed, implanted prior to ablation Maze surgery Sleeves of LA – PV connections Pulmonary veins Pulmonary vein isolation Segmental Lasso RF Immediately ≈90% successful Long-term results 60-80% freedom from symptomatic arrhythmia with or without AA Techniques in development! Many remaining issues: • Different techniques • Triggers vs substrate • Additional lines • Selection of patients • etc., etc. Circumferential Intraoperativ AF ablation M 54, persistent AF 10 months June 6, 2002 CABG + cryo Survival among patients admitted for stroke and with medical history of atrial fibrillation by CHADS2 score 1.00 Survival distribution function . 0.80 0.60 0.40 CHADS2 score 0.20 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Months 0.00 0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 54 60 Atrial specific rhythm control agents Atrial specific action Minimized risk of ventricular proarrhythmias Unspecific action Risk of ventricular proarrhythmias * New classes? * Come away from classes? * Aventis, AZ, Cardiome etc. Ur FASS 2010 - Antiarytmika Ur FASS 2010 Ur FASS 2010 – C01BB AA klass IB Ur FASS 2010 Ur FASS 2010 Sotalol!!?? betablockerare och QT-förlängning Ur FASS 2010 – C01BG AA klass IV Decreasing atrial fibrillation burden is an important goal As with heart failure or angina success in managing atrial fibrillation Is defined as a decrease in Frequency of episodes Duration of episodes Symptoms during episodes Decreasing atrialfibillation burden offers potential to Successfully treat atrial fibrillation by * decreasing mortality * decreasing hospitalizations * increasing QoL Prystowsky EN. J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol. 2006;17(suppl 2):S7-S10; Wolf PA et al. Arch Intern Med. 1998;158:229-234. Long-term maintenance of SR improves functional capacity - AFFIRM 0.50 Mean NYHA-FC score 0.45 0.40 0.35 0.30 0.25 (Lower NYHA-FC score = less symptomatic) 0.20 0.15 Adjusted P<.0001 Current atrial fibrillation 0.10 No current atrial fibrillation 0.05 0 Initial 2 4 8 1 Months Chung MK et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2005;46:1891-1899. 1⅓ 1⅔ 2 2⅓ 2⅔ 3 Years 3⅓ 3⅔ 4 4⅓ 4⅔ 5