“…Published reviews of the management of atrial fibrillation have examined the evidence for the use of the pharmacologic agents commonly used to treat rapid atrial fibrillation. 4,6,7 Broad consensus is seen in the recommendations of these reviews insofar as they recommend that calcium-channel blockers and b-blockers be considered first-line agents for rate control in patients with preserved left ventricular function, but caution their use in the presence of poor left ventricular function. We believe that many emergency physicians use digoxin despite its slow onset of effect because of uncertainty of their patients' underlying cardiac status.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…For this group, digoxin or amiodarone has been recommended. 4,6,7 Digoxin has recently been the mainstay of therapy, and although inexpensive, it has a slow onset of action and is significantly less effective in states of increased sympathetic tone. 4,6,[8][9][10] Despite the widespread use of amiodarone in this setting, the evidence for its efficacy is somewhat equivocal.…”
“…Published reviews of the management of atrial fibrillation have examined the evidence for the use of the pharmacologic agents commonly used to treat rapid atrial fibrillation. 4,6,7 Broad consensus is seen in the recommendations of these reviews insofar as they recommend that calcium-channel blockers and b-blockers be considered first-line agents for rate control in patients with preserved left ventricular function, but caution their use in the presence of poor left ventricular function. We believe that many emergency physicians use digoxin despite its slow onset of effect because of uncertainty of their patients' underlying cardiac status.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…For this group, digoxin or amiodarone has been recommended. 4,6,7 Digoxin has recently been the mainstay of therapy, and although inexpensive, it has a slow onset of action and is significantly less effective in states of increased sympathetic tone. 4,6,[8][9][10] Despite the widespread use of amiodarone in this setting, the evidence for its efficacy is somewhat equivocal.…”
“…Despite all the changes and the differences between European and US guidelines, direct-current cardioversion remains the most effective therapy 11 12. The most recent revision of AHA guidelines is based on few studies, some of which are retrospective in design 8 9 13 14.…”
Based on limited available evidence from small heterogeneous human studies, for the treatment of stable, monomorphic VT, procainamide, ajmaline and sotalol were all superior to lidocaine; amiodarone was not more effective than procainamide.
“…This can be achieved with cardioversion, antiarrhythmic medications, or pacing techniques. DC cardioversion even at early stage or as "first line" is reasonable (359,360). Advantages include the absence of proarrhythmia and high efficacy in a timely fashion.…”
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