BMJ  2007;335:355-356 (25 August), doi:10.1136/bmj.39266.497396.BE

Editorials

Diagnosing atrial fibrillation in general practice

The combination of a clinical history, clinical signs, and an ECG will pick up most cases

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

In this week's BMJ, Mant and colleagues and Fitzmaurice and colleagues present the results of the SAFE (screening for atrial fibrillation in the elderly) study. They assess how accurately general practitioners, practice nurses, and an interpretive computer program can diagnose atrial fibrillation on an electrocardiogram (ECG), and they report on the effectiveness of screening patients aged 65 and over for atrial fibrillation in British general practice.1 2 The prevalence of atrial fibrillation rises with age from 1.5% in people in their 60s to more than 10% in those over 90. People with atrial fibrillation have double the mortality and a four to fivefold higher risk of stroke than those without fibrillation. About a quarter of all strokes in elderly people are caused by atrial fibrillation. Strokes caused by atrial fibrillation are often severe and lead to high mortality and a low quality of life.3

Even if normal rhythm cannot be . . . [Full text of this article]

Henk C P M van Weert, assistant professor of general practice

Department of General Practice, Division Clinical Methods and Public Health, Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, 1100 DD Netherlands

h.c.vanweert@amc.uva.nl


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Relevant Articles

Accuracy of diagnosing atrial fibrillation on electrocardiogram by primary care practitioners and interpretative diagnostic software: analysis of data from screening for atrial fibrillation in the elderly (SAFE) trial
Jonathan Mant, David A Fitzmaurice, F D Richard Hobbs, Sue Jowett, Ellen T Murray, Roger Holder, Michael Davies, and Gregory Y H Lip
BMJ 2007 335: 380. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Screening versus routine practice in detection of atrial fibrillation in patients aged 65 or over: cluster randomised controlled trial
David A Fitzmaurice, F D Richard Hobbs, Sue Jowett, Jonathon Mant, Ellen T Murray, Roger Holder, J P Raftery, S Bryan, Michael Davies, Gregory Y H Lip, and T F Allan
BMJ 2007 335: 383. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Rapid Responses:

Read all Rapid Responses

opportunistic screening for atrial fibrillation
oscar,m jolobe
bmj.com, 24 Aug 2007 [Full text]
Quality of ECG recordings
E Wright
bmj.com, 27 Aug 2007 [Full text]
Article should not be subject to mis-interpretation
Bedansh Chaudhary
bmj.com, 28 Aug 2007 [Full text]



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