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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

There is a demonstrated statistical association between atrial fibrillation, rheumatic valvular disease, and embolic stroke. This article assesses the results of 6 major clinical trials (AFASAK, BAATAF, SPINAF, SPAF [parts I and II], CAFA and EAFTA--see text for trial names). Multivariate analysis revealed 4 independent clinical features that identified patients with atrial fibrillation at an increased risk for stroke: hypertension, increasing age, previous transient ischemic attack, and diabetes mellitus. Without anticoagulation therapy, patients with any of these risk factors had a 4% annual risk of stroke. Patients with cardiac disorders such as congestive heart failure and coronary artery disease have a stroke rate 3 times higher than patients without any risk factors; patients with atrial fibrillation but no concomitant risk factors or structural heart disease seemed to have little concomitant risk for stroke. Meta-analysis revealed a 64% reduction of risk for stroke in patients treated with warfarin, as compared with placebo. The value of warfarin therapy in patients > 75 years old is less clear because of a high risk of hemorrhagic complications.
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PMID:Atrial fibrillation, anticoagulation, and stroke. 860 90

Atrial fibrillation, which has age-dependent exponentially rising high prevalence, is now well known to frequently predispose to systemic thromboembolism. In the past decade, several large-scale clinical randomized trials for prevention of thromboembolism in nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation have been performed for its primary and secondary preventions. The first five major trials (AFASAK, BAATAF, SPAF-I, CAFA, SPINAF) for primary prevention of stroke have demonstrated a significant risk reduction (68%) for stroke on oral anticoagulation without any significant increase in major hemorrhage. On the other hand, although AFASAK and SPAF I showed controversial results for comparison of aspirin and control, the collaborative analysis revealed a significant risk reduction (36%). In their analysis of risk factors for stroke, prior stroke, diabetes mellitus, and hypertension have been stressed as high risk factors. Recently, some additional trials have been done concerning secondary prophylaxis, primary prevention in high risk patients, the optimal dose of warfarin, the role of aspirin and so on. In EAFT, a secondary prevention trial, warfarin has reduced (66%) stroke from 12%/yr to 4%/yr, while aspirin alone to 10%/yr. In SPAF III, it has been reported that adjusted-dose warfarin with target INR2.0 to 3.0 is effective and safe in high risk patients. However, SPAF II showed that warfarin was not useful in elder patients (75yr <) because of an increase in hemorrhage. That may be why warfarin was still underused (40% >). Anyway, it is of importance to think about the strategy for prevention on the individual level of patients with atrial fibrillation, taking into consideration echocardiographical and hematological data besides clinical risk factors.
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PMID:[Frontiers in prevention of thromboembolism in nonvalvular atrial fibrillation]. 1034 39