FYI.
Towards a new classification of atrial fibrillation detected after a stroke or a transient ischaemic attack
Summary
Globally, up to 1·5 million individuals with ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic
attack can be newly diagnosed with atrial fibrillation per year. In the past decade,
evidence has accumulated supporting the notion that atrial fibrillation first detected
after a stroke or transient ischaemic attack differs from atrial fibrillation known
before the occurrence of as stroke. Atrial fibrillation detected after stroke is associated
with a lower prevalence of risk factors, cardiovascular comorbidities, and atrial
cardiomyopathy than atrial fibrillation known before stroke occurrence. These differences
might explain why it is associated with a lower risk of recurrence of ischaemic stroke
than known atrial fibrillation. Patients with ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic
attack can be classified in three categories: no atrial fibrillation, known atrial
fibrillation before stroke occurrence, and atrial fibrillation detected after stroke.
This classification could harmonise future research in the field and help to understand
the role of prolonged cardiac monitoring for secondary stroke prevention with application
of a personalised risk-based approach to the selection of patients for anticoagulation.
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