Mp. Vandenberg et al., CLINICAL AND ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHIC CORRELATES OF EXERCISE-INDUCED ATRIAL-FIBRILLATION - A CASE-CONTROL STUDY, American journal of noninvasive cardiology, 8(3), 1994, pp. 146-150
Clinical and electrocardiographic correlates of atrial fibrillation (A
F) induced during routine exercise testing were examined in a case-con
trol study. With the use of a prospective data base 11,730 consecutive
exercise tests in 7,273 patients were reviewed. AF developed in 14 pa
tients during exercise and in 9 patients during recovery (total incide
nce 0.3%). The mean age was 62 (range 36-76) years, and most patients
were male (87%). AF was sustained (> 30 s) in 17 patients. The median
duration of AF was 233 s. Atrial premature activity, including atrial
tachycardia, often (13 patients) preceded AF. In 6 patients (26%) no s
tructural heart disease was apparent. Compared with controls, matched
for age, sex, and test indication, AF patients used less beta blockers
(9 vs. 43%; p < 0.05) and had a higher maximal heart rate (144 vs. 12
7 beats/min; p < 0.05). Also, ischemic responses to exercise were obse
rved more often in these patients (26 vs. 6%; p < 0.05). These finding
s indicate that most patients with exercise-induced AF have associated
cardiac disorders, foremost ischemic heart disease. In a subset of pa
tients, however, symphathetic activation per se appears to play an imp
ortant role.