Perioperative atrial fibrillation
From IDWiki
Background
- Refers to atrial fibrillation that occurs during or immediately following non-cardiac surgery
- Excludes patients with known persistent or paroxysmal atrial fibrillation
- Occurs in 30% after thoracic surgery and in 1-20% of non-thoracic, non-cardiac surgery
Clinical Manifestations
- Irregularly irregular heart rhythm with atrial fibrillation on ECG, usually within the first 4 days postoperatively
- High rates of spontaneous cardioversion
Management
- Screen patients with known atrial fibrillation with telemetry for 24 to 48 hours after surgery
- If hemodynamically unstable, consider electric cardioversion as per typical atrial fibrillation
- Rate control with β blockers to target HR <100 bpm (alternatives include calcium channel blockers or digoxin)
- Unclear whether long-term anticoagulation is indicated; the ASPIRE-AF will hopefully answer this question
- Consider evaluating with CHA2DS2-VASc, though not validated in the patient population
- Timing of anticoagulation would need to be discussed with the surgeon
- Arrange outpatient echocardiogram and extended Holter monitor (14 days)