Breithardt G, Kottkamp H, Haverkamp W, Hindricks G, Fetsch T, Borggrefe M
Medizinische Klinik und Poliklinik, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster.
Z Kardiol. 1994;83 Suppl 5:63-9.
The prevalence of atrial fibrillation increases with age, with rates of 2-5% among people over the age of 60 years. Patients may be highly symptomatic or may suffer from hemodynamic compromise or thromboembolic complications. However, antiarrhythmic drug treatment implies problems like the choice of the suitable drug, the individual benefit/risk profile, and alternative treatment strategies. Experimental and clinical data support the concept that atrial fibrillation in the clinical setting in most cases is due to multiple reentrant wavelets. A critical number of three to six simultaneously circulating reentrant wavelets seems to be necessary for the maintenance of atrial fibrillation. Consequently, antiarrhythmic drugs may terminate or prevent atrial fibrillation by prolonging the refractory period or slowing conduction velocity, thereby leading to conduction block. In clinical practice, antiarrhythmic therapy may act by slowing of the ventricular rate due to depression of atrioventricular nodal conduction or by termination and/or prevention of atrial fibrillation. Digitalis is commonly used for the control of the ventricular rate. Betablocking drugs and verapamil are effective in this respect during exercise performance. For antiarrhythmic conversion and prophylaxis of recurrences of atrial fibrillation, class Ia (e.g., quinidine), Ic (e.g., flecainide and propafenone), and class III (e.g., amiodarone and sotalol) drugs of the Vaughan Williams classification are useful. Presently, no general concept exists whether medical or electrical cardioversion should be used as a first line approach for termination of atrial fibrillation. In the individual patient with atrial fibrillation, the potential benefit of restoring sinus rhythm must be weighed against the morbidity and mortality of the arrhythmia and the morbidity and mortality of the antiarrhythmic agents used.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
心房颤动的患病率随年龄增长而增加,60岁以上人群的患病率为2%-5%。患者可能症状严重,也可能出现血流动力学损害或血栓栓塞并发症。然而,抗心律失常药物治疗存在一些问题,如合适药物的选择、个体的获益/风险状况以及替代治疗策略。实验和临床数据支持这样的概念,即在临床环境中,大多数情况下心房颤动是由多个折返小波引起的。维持心房颤动似乎需要三到六个同时循环的折返小波的临界数量。因此,抗心律失常药物可通过延长不应期或减慢传导速度来终止或预防心房颤动,从而导致传导阻滞。在临床实践中,抗心律失常治疗可通过抑制房室结传导减慢心室率,或通过终止和/或预防心房颤动来发挥作用。洋地黄常用于控制心室率。β受体阻滞剂和维拉帕米在运动时对此有效。对于心房颤动的抗心律失常转复和复发预防,Vaughan Williams分类的Ia类(如奎尼丁)、Ic类(如氟卡尼和普罗帕酮)和III类(如胺碘酮和索他洛尔)药物是有用的。目前,对于应将药物复律还是电复律作为终止心房颤动的一线方法,尚无普遍的概念。对于个体心房颤动患者,恢复窦性心律的潜在益处必须与心律失常的发病率和死亡率以及所用抗心律失常药物的发病率和死亡率相权衡。(摘要截选至250词)