Serum atrial natriuretic peptide concentration is a useful predictor of atrial standstill in patients with heart failure

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Abstract

Two cases of atrial standstill are presented, one with cardiac amyloidosis, the other with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. The plasma atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) concentration was normal to slightly elevated in both patients, despite a marked elevation of the plasma brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) concentration. In the patient with amyloidosis (ANP: 170 pg/ml, BNP: 1220 pg/ml), a dual chamber pacemaker was successfully implanted for the treatment of sinus arrest. However, loss of atrial capture occurred 1 month later. In the patient with dilated cardiomyopathy (ANP: 47 pg/ml, BNP: 422 pg/ml), an electrophysiologic study confirmed persistent atrial standstill and failure to pace from either the right atrium or the coronary sinus. The hypothesis is that the attenuated increase in plasma ANP concentration relative to the increase in the BNP concentration may be a sensitive and useful marker to confirm atrial standstill in the setting of congestive heart failure.

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APA

Suguta, M., Hara, K., Nakano, A., Amano, A., Hasegawa, A., & Kurabayashi, M. (2000). Serum atrial natriuretic peptide concentration is a useful predictor of atrial standstill in patients with heart failure. Japanese Circulation Journal, 64(7), 537–540. https://doi.org/10.1253/jcj.64.537

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