Atrial fibrillation is the world's most common arrhythmia, with an incidence that is
increasing in Western countries. One-in-four adults will experience atrial fibrillation
at some point in their life.
Strategies for the management of atrial fibrillation include rate control, prophylaxis
against stroke, lifestyle modification, and restoration of sinus rhythm through medical
or electrical cardioversion. Electrical cardioversion for the restoration of sinus rhythm
was first described by Lown and colleagues in 1962, and has undergone a number of
procedural advances in the intervening six decades. Chief amongst these was a transition
from cardioverting using monophasic to biphasic waveforms, something unequivocally
demonstrated to increase cardioversion success, with lower energy, current, and less skin
and muscle damage than monophasic devices. Yet the majority of the data which continues
to guide cardioversion is derived from the era of monophasic therapy.
Data from cardioversion with monophasic waveforms suggests that the use of higher initial
shock energy is associated with higher first shock success, fewer shocks, and lower
levels of skeletal muscle injury, with no increase in troponin to suggest greater cardiac
injury. Likewise, studies of shock energy using biphasic devices have demonstrated
benefit of maximum fixed shock energy. However, whilst the energy of a defibrillator
remains entrenched in the descriptive vocabulary of cardioversion for atrial
fibrillation, it is the flow of current across the myocardium that achieves
cardioversion, and resuscitation guidelines have previously recommended a switch to the
more physiologic current-based description.
Different defibrillators deliver different currents at the same energy setting based on
the capacitance of the device. As such, manufacturers of defibrillators recommend
different energy levels for cardioverting atrial fibrillation with some standard biphasic
defibrillators (Philips HeartStart MRx Monitor/Defibrillator) unable to deliver higher
than 200J energy, while some (Lifepak 15 Monitor/Defibrillator) extend to 360J. No
studies have compared initial 200J vs. 360J shock energies between these devices for
cardioverting persistent atrial fibrillation.
This study is a single centre randomized non-blinded study of the effectiveness of 200J
vs. 360J fixed output biphasic electrical cardioversion in patients undergoing electrical
cardioversion of persistent atrial fibrillation. The study hypothesis is that
cardioversion with shock energy fixed to 360J delivered by a LifePak
Monitor/Defibrillator is more efficacious than a 200J delivered by a Philips HeartStart
MRx Monitor/Defibrillator, without worsening safety outcomes.