Jump to content

Atrial flutter: Difference between revisions

Created page with "'''Atrial flutter''' is a supraventricular tachycardia and is generally managed similarly as atrial fibrillation, and in many cases it progresses to Afib. It requires anticoagulation and either rate or rhythm control. There are two types: * Typical atrial flutter * Atypical atrial flutter On the ECG, P-waves are replaced by F-waves which have a frequency of about 300/minute. There is a fixed pattern of atrial:ventricular conduction (P-waves:QRS-complexes), usua..."
(Created page with "'''Atrial flutter''' is a supraventricular tachycardia and is generally managed similarly as atrial fibrillation, and in many cases it progresses to Afib. It requires anticoagulation and either rate or rhythm control. There are two types: * Typical atrial flutter * Atypical atrial flutter On the ECG, P-waves are replaced by F-waves which have a frequency of about 300/minute. There is a fixed pattern of atrial:ventricular conduction (P-waves:QRS-complexes), usua...")
(No difference)