MEDICATIONS: CORTICOSTEROID THERAPY MAY
BE ASSOCIATED WITH IRREGULAR HEARTBEAT
May 9, 2006 — High doses of medications known as corticosteroids may be
linked to an increased risk for atrial fibrillation, a heart rhythm disorder
characterized by an irregular heartbeat, according to an article in the May 8
issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, a journal of the American Medical
Association.
Atrial fibrillation, which occurs when muscles of the heart's two upper
chambers (atria) contract irregularly, is the most common type of irregular
heartbeat and affects about 4 percent of adults older than age 60, according to
background information in the article. Individuals with atrial fibrillation have
four to five times the risk of stroke as those who do not and may also be at
higher risk for other cardiovascular complications. Corticosteroids — often
prescribed for asthma and other lung diseases as well as arthritis, allergies
and blood cancer — have been linked to atrial fibrillation in case reports, the
authors write.
Cornelis S. van der Hooft, M.D., Erasmus University Medical Center,
Rotterdam, the Netherlands, and colleagues evaluated 7,983 adults who were age
55 or older in 1990. The researchers followed the participants through Jan. 1,
2000, or until they developed atrial fibrillation or died. Participants
underwent regular medical examinations throughout the study and their
prescription information was gathered from pharmacies.
Between July 1, 1991, and the end of the study, 435 cases of atrial
fibrillation developed, 385 of which met the researchers' qualifications for
analysis. Among those who had received a prescription for high-dose
corticosteroids within one month of the beginning of the study, the risk of
atrial fibrillation was six times as high as it was among those who had never
taken the medication. The patients' underlying conditions did not affect their
risk for atrial fibrillation; those who were prescribed high-dose
corticosteroids for asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease had the same
increased risk of developing atrial fibrillation as those patients who took the
medication to treat arthritis, allergies or blood cancers.
Corticosteroids could affect heart function through several different
mechanisms, the authors write. The medication may affect the balance of
potassium in heart muscle cells, which in turn causes the muscle to contract
irregularly. Corticosteroids also may cause retention of sodium and fluid, which
can lead to high blood pressure, congestive heart failure or enlarged atria, all
risk factors for atrial fibrillation.
"Our findings suggest that patients receiving high-dose corticosteroid
therapy are at increased risk of developing atrial fibrillation," the authors
conclude. "Therefore, careful monitoring of these patients by clinical
examination and by performing an electrocardiogram before and after high-dose
(pulse) therapy could increase the chance to diagnose and treat this serious
arrhythmia as early as possible. Because persons who develop atrial fibrillation
are at increased risk of serious cardiovascular complications such as heart
failure and ischemic stroke and have a chance to develop chronic atrial
fibrillation, early detection of atrial fibrillation is
essential."
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