Readers interested in atrial fibrillation should know that the world’s best AF meeting starts tomorrow Friday February 23 in Park City Utah. The Western AF symposium features more than 80 faculty from across the globe. These are the leaders in AF. It’s shocking how many stars come to this meeting. I’m honored to serve as […]
Category: Atrial fibrillation
Doctors like me have performed AF ablation for more than a decade without knowing whether the major procedure improves outcomes. That sounds crazy but it’s true. Until now, the only evidence we had that doing all these burns or freezes in the heart helped people was that it made people feel better than they did […]
Last week I wrote a column on theheart.org | Medscape Cardiology on the new Apple Watch ECG and Kardia Band. The Tweet I sent out on Saturday has done well — 74 Retweets (without any robots) is pretty good. The Apple Watch ECG — The good, the challenges, and the really scary. My thoughts on […]
Our cautionary left atrial appendage occlusion (Watchman) editorial is now published in a prominent medical journal, called Heart Rhythm. My co-authors are Drs. Andrew Foy and Gerald Naccarelli from Penn State. It was a peer-reviewed version of my previous theheart.org | Medscape Cardiology column. Watchman and other similar devices are plugs that occlude the left atrial […]
The European Cardiology Congress, ESC as it is called, has grown into the largest medical meeting in the world. This year, more than 31,000 attendees from 153 countries came to Barcelona. I was busy. Here is an update of the big stories: Inflammation:Â Experts agree that inflammation associates with heart disease. One of the keys […]
I remain concerned about the irrational exuberance among some of my colleagues toward left atrial appendage occlusion devices for the prevention of stroke in patients with atrial fibrillation. In short, these devices are plugs that doctors place into the left atrial appendage. The idea is to stop clots from forming or escaping from the left […]
I attended the European Heart Rhythm Association meeting last week in Vienna. Here is an update on the stories I found most interesting–the ones I wrote about on the heart.org | Medscape Cardiology. Brain Lesions after AF ablation:Â Electrophysiologists do not talk much about the small brain lesions that appear after procedures in the left […]
A study presented at the recent Heart Rhythm Society meeting in Chicago has added more uncertainty about the significance of short-duration AF episodes. Before I tell you about the study, I need to clarify what I mean by short-duration AF episodes, sometimes called subclinical AF (SCAF). SCAF is AF on a monitor that is often […]
I am changing my policy on comments. In the past, if you had one approved comment then all of your subsequent comments would post without moderation. I changed that. Now I will moderate all comments. That means there may be a delay. Another change is that I am not going to allow personal medical anecdotes. […]
Our brains can easily fool us. No experienced doctor would deny the power of the placebo effect. Today I want to discuss the nocebo effect, which occurs when negative expectations of something causes it to have a more negative effect than it otherwise would. Drugs can exert a strong nocebo effect. If your brain thinks […]
We have to talk about drugs. No, not illicit drugs, but medications used by doctors and patients. Plaintiff attorneys run ads on TV that fool people into thinking certain meds are bad. The current one I deal with is the clot-blocking drug rivaroxaban (Xarelto.) Before that, it was dabigatran (Pradaxa). If, or when, the makers […]