Atrial Fibrillation Treatment at Nano Hospitals
AF is treatable and typically not life-threatening. If left untreated, it can lead to emergency situations such as stroke and heart failure.
While the heart is in atrial fibrillation, it may not be able to pump effectively, potentially leading to a reduction in the heart’s overall ability to pump blood to the rest of the body. Small blood clots can also form in the atria due to the irregular pumping rhythm, increasing the risk of stroke or a larger blood clot in another part of the body.
The main goal of AF treatment is to lessen the risk of stroke and to reduce symptoms caused by a rapid, irregular heartbeat. Your treatment will depend on:
- How long you’ve had AF
- Severity of your symptoms
- Underlying cause of your problem
- If you have other heart problems
General treatment options include medication, medical procedures and lifestyle changes.
Treatment of atrial fibrillation also involves resetting or restoring the heart’s normal sinus rhythm, called cardioversion.
- Cardioversion can be accomplished with medications (antiarrhythmics), or by an electrical shock to your heart.
- Medications, given intravenously or orally, are successful in about 30 to 60 percent of cases, though AF often returns.
- Electrical shock is successful in about 85 to 95 percent of cases.
More recently, doctors have discovered that the abnormal electrical impulses seen in atrial fibrillation often start in the pulmonary (lung) veins, which drain blood from the lungs into the left atrium of the heart. The abnormal electrical impulses from these veins travel to the left atrium and then to the right atrium, causing atrial fibrillation.
Procedures designed to prevent these electrical impulses from traveling from the pulmonary veins into the left atrium include:
- Pulmonary vein isolation, or radiofrequency catheter ablation
- Maze surgical procedures
- MiniMaze is a minimally invasive surgery
- Standard or Conventional Maze is a full open-heart surgery