Burden, timing, and relationship of cardiovascular hospitalization to mortality among Medicare beneficiaries with newly diagnosed atrial fibrillation
Conclusions: Cardiovascular hospitalization is common in the first year after AF diagnosis. Atrial fibrillation, heart failure, myocardial infarction, and stroke/transient ischemic attack account for half of primary hospitalization diagnosis. Cardiovascular hospitalization is independently associated with mortality, irrespective of time from diagnosis to first hospitalization, and represents a critical inflection point in survival trajectory. These findings highlight the importance of CV hospitalization as a marker of disease progression and poor outcomes. Efforts to clarify the determinants of hospitalization could inform interventions to reduce admissions and improve survival.
Source: American Heart Journal - Category: Cardiology Authors: Mintu P. Turakhia, Matthew D. Solomon, Mehul Jhaveri, Pamela Davis, Michael R. Eber, Ryan Conrad, Nicholas Summers, Darius Lakdawalla Tags: Electrophysiology Source Type: research
More News: Arrhythmia | Atrial Fibrillation | Cardiology | Cardiovascular | Heart | Heart Attack | Heart Failure | Ischemic Stroke | Medicare | Stroke | Study