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Atrial Fibrillation Management in Hospitalized Patients: Early Rhythm Control, Ablation, and the ...

In this episode of Hospital Medicine Unplugged, we blitz inpatient atrial fibrillation (AF)—fix the trigger, pick rate vs rhythm, and prevent stroke—so you can move fast and safely. We open with the do-firsts: vitals + hemodynamics, bedside ECG, labs (electrolytes, Mg, CBC, TSH when relevant), pulse oximetry/ABG, and a deliberate hunt for reversible triggers—infection, hypoxia, electrolyte derangements, volume shifts, ACS/PE, surgery, alcohol/withdrawal, stimulants. Treat the cause; the rhythm often follows. Unstable? (hypotension, shock, ischemia, pulmonary edema) → immediate synchronized DCCV. While prepping: oxygen, gentle fluids/pressors as needed, avoid AV-nodal blockers if WPW suspected. Stable? Rate or rhythm are both reasonable. • Rate control first for most: β-blocker (metoprolol, esmolol) or non-DHP CCB (diltiazem) if LVEF >40%. Add digoxin when hypotensive/sedentary/HFrEF. Target lenient HR <110 at rest; go stricter if symptoms or TIC (tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy). • Rhythm control when symptoms persist, HF decompensation, poor rate control, newly diagnosed AF with CV risk, or patient preference. Options: electrical cardioversion (fast, effective), or drugs tailored to substrate: Class Ic (flecainide/propafenone) only if no structural/ischemic disease; amiodarone for structural heart disease/HF; sotalol/dofetilide (inpatient initiation, watch QT/renal). Early rhythm control can lower CV events in selected patients. • HFrEF tips: favor β-blocker ± digoxin for rate; avoid diltiazem/verapamil; consider catheter ablation early for symptom control and outcomes. Cardioversion anticoagulation rules (no preexcitation/WPW): • AF >48 h or unknown: ≥3 weeks therapeutic OAC or perform TEE-guided cardioversion if no LA thrombus, then ≥4 weeks OAC after. • AF <48 h and low stroke risk: may cardiovert now; still continue OAC for ~4 weeks if risk factors exist. Stroke prevention—don’t miss it. Use CHA₂DS₂-VASc to guide therapy; check HAS-BLED to modifiable risks—not to deny needed OAC. Prefer DOACs over warfarin for most nonvalvular AF (dose-adjust for renal function). Warfarin for mechanical valves or moderate–severe mitral stenosis. In sepsis, avoid routine acute anticoagulation (↑bleeding, no stroke benefit). LAAO is a niche option when long-term OAC is truly not possible. Post-op AF (CABG/valve): β-blockers first; rhythm control (amiodarone or DCCV) if poorly tolerated; consider OAC for ~6–8 weeks if bleeding risk acceptable, then reassess. Pregnancy: DCCV is safe; for rate use β-blocker (not atenolol) or digoxin. Heparins preferred for anticoagulation; DOACs are avoided. We close with the hospital bundle that sticks: 1. Screen & treat triggers (sepsis, hypoxia, electrolytes, ACS/PE, meds). 2. Default to rate control (β-blocker or diltiazem; digoxin add-on) with HR <110 unless symptomatic. 3. Escalate to rhythm control for symptoms, HF, or failure of rate—DCCV early; pick AA drug by substrate; consider ablation in HFrEF or recurrent. 4. Anticoagulation pathway: DOAC-first, valve disease exceptions; TEE vs 3-week rule before cardioversion; ≥4 weeks after. 5. Monitoring: telemetry, daily K/Mg goals (K ≥4.0, Mg ≥2.0), watch QT/AV block, drug-drug interactions. 6. Risk-factor remix: weight loss, BP control, OSA treatment (CPAP), diabetes optimization, alcohol moderation, exercise, smoking cessation—these cut AF burden and recurrences. 7. Discharge plan: clear OAC plan, rate/rhythm meds with doses, red-flags, follow-up ECG/Holter, renal/hepatic labs for drug safety, and referral to AF clinic when available. Bottom line: Treat the trigger, stabilize the rate, choose rhythm wisely, and anticoagulate by risk. Build a system that’s fast, safe, and recurrence-proof—so your patients leave in rhythm (or with a controlled rate) and a plan that lasts.

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