RESUMEN
A fibrilação atrial (FA) é a arritmia cardíaca sustentada mais comum na prática clínica. Estima se que 1 a 2% da população mundial seja acometida dessa arritmia e ainda se reconhece que este número está subestimado, dado que até um terço dos pacientes com FA são assintomáticos. Além dos fatores de risco clássicos como diabetes, doença valvar, infarto do miocárdio e insuficiência cardíaca, insuficiência renal crônica, obesidade e apneia obstrutiva do sono, a hipertensão tem um papel muito impactante no surgimento da FA pela sua alta prevalência, com isso sendo o fator de risco mais comum para o desenvolvimento de FA. O manejo adequado da HA é importante para prevenção da FA, controle do ritmo, insuficiência cardíaca e prevenção do acidente vascular cerebral (AVC). O tratamento deve ser integrado por equipe multidisciplinar, individualizando caso a caso, estando sujeito a mudanças ao longo do tempo, com o desenvolvimento de novos fatores de risco, sintomas, progressão da doença e com advento de novos tratamentos. Algumas drogas, tais como os BRAs e iECA parecem apresentar mecanismos específicos de atuação na redução do risco de arritmias. A ablação por cateter pode ser a estratégia mais eficaz para manutenção do ritmo sinusal, em paciente sintomáticos. O objetivo dessa revisão é resumir os dados atuais referente ao manejo do paciente hipertenso com fibrilação atrial.
Worldwide, AF is the most common sustained cardiac arrhythmia in adults. The currently estimated prevalence and incidence in the world are rising, owing to extended longevity and increased survival with chronic diseases. This multifactorial arrhythmia is intertwined with common concomitant cardiovascular diseases, which share classical cardiovascular risk factors, including hypertension, diabetes mellitus, heart failure (HF), coronary artery disease (CAD), chronic kidney disease (CKD), obesity, and obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). The most common risk factor for AF in the general population is hypertension, and in these patients, left ventricular hypertrophy followed by left atrial enlargement creates the anatomical substrate for AF. Adequate management of hypertension is important for AF prevention, rhythm control, heart failure, and stroke prevention. Integrated management of AF patients requires a coordinated and agreed patient-individualized care pathway to deliver optimized treatment by an interdisciplinary team. The effect of some anti hypertensives, such as RAAS Inhibitors seems to be superior to other antihypertensive treatment to prevent AF recurrences in hypertensive patients with paroxysmal AF beyond the BP reduction. Guidelines suggest a more prominent role for radiofrequency ablation in the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF), including its use as first-line therapy in recurrent symptomatic paroxysmal or persistent AF in whom a rhythm control strategy is chosen. The objective of this review is to summarize current data on the hypertension in relation to AF, their management, and ongoing research in the field.
RESUMEN
AIMS: We sought to present a series of 13 pregnancy-associated spontaneous coronary artery dissection (P-SCAD), their angiographic and multimodal imaging findings, acute phase treatment, and outcomes. METHODS AND RESULTS: Between 2005 and 2015, 13 cases of P-SCAD were collected from a database of 11 tertiary hospitals. The mean age was 33.8 ± 3.7 years; most patients had no risk factors for coronary artery disease, and the majority were multiparous. P-SCAD occurred during the puerperium in 12 patients with a median time of 10 days. Only one patient presented with P-SCAD in the 37th week of pregnancy, and she was the only patient who died in this series. Six patients (46%) presented with ST-segment elevation acute myocardial infarction (STEMI), six (46%) presented with non-STEMI, and one presented with unstable angina; one-third of women had cardiogenic shock. In 12 patients, the dissection involved the left anterior descending or circumflex artery, and it extended to the left main coronary artery in 6 patients. Intravascular ultrasound or optical coherence tomography helped to confirm diagnosis and guide treatment in 46% of cases. Seven women were managed clinically; percutaneous coronary intervention was performed in five cases, and coronary artery bypass grafting was performed in one patient...