Roger Bullock is Clinical Director of Older Peoples Services in Avon and Wiltshire Mental Health NHS Partnership Trust (Kingshill Research Centre, Victoria Hospital, Okus Road, Swindon SN1 4HZ, UK. Email: roger.bullock{at}kingshill-research.org).
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As a result of this pairing of specialties, each of which has half the information, clinical judgements are often based on a misconstrued relationship between two facts that increasing vagal tone can have physiological effects on the heart and that acetylcholinesterase inhibitors can increase peripheral acetylcholine at the synapse. The real association between them has in fact not been demonstrated the only clear reports of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors actually directly causing a bradycardia are in significant overdose. However, because the assumption of a connection is made, some clinics dogmatically perform an ECG on everybody. Others attempt to define at-risk groups, and others do no cardiac assessment at all. This is not a healthy situation, as such variation in practice exposes an organisation to risk both in terms of clinical governance and over-utilisation of resources.
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Open-label and case studies sometimes report that acetylcholinesterase inhibitors have unmasked cases of potential silent parasympathetic weakness. However, this is very rare and does not justify wholesale screening, especially as the most likely tool is the ECG, which clinical trials have shown to be a poor predictor of cardiac events. It is therefore reasonable to conclude, as do Rowland et al, that routine ECG screening for all patients is not going to reduce the risk of an adverse event when treating patients with Alzheimers disease with acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. It is therefore an unnecessary expense for the memory clinic.
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First-degree heart block is relatively benign and most cardiologists would be happy for acetylcholinesterase inhibitors to be used in that circumstance. Third-degree heart block demands a pacemaker, and treatment should be withheld until one has been fitted. Once the pacemaker is in situ, then acetylcholinesterase inhibitors are fine. The biggest area of controversy is second-degree or Mobitz heart block (Ariyarajah et al, 2005) especially if it is asymptomatic. Some cardiologists feel that Mobitz type I heart block (Wenckebach phenomenon) is as benign as first-degree block as far as acetylcholinesterase inhibitors are concerned. Others disagree. Mobitz type II heart block is considered more unstable and, although not always paced for clinical reasons, merits the use of caution with acetylcholinesterase inhibitors even though to date, there are no data to suggest they do increase the chance of moving from one degree of heart block to another. Obviously, separating these different heart blocks requires a knowledge of the ECG, which is why the protocol suggests GP or specialist help. It is probably the confidence and experience of the memory clinic clinicians and ease of availability of an ECG that will determine whether the slow pulse is examined within the memory clinic or not.
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The protocol means that every person exposed to a acetylcholinesterase inhibitor can have a basic assurance that the treatment they are being offered will not do them any cardiac harm. This is of paramount importance in terms of clinical governance, as variability in practice and differences in opinion are difficult to resolve when sudden adverse events occur. Many memory clinics are provided by mental health trusts that are carrying out more and more physical care. Simple rules such as these help the staff and the trust to feel they are doing their best, without forcing them to resort to unnecessary use of their own resources or those of the primary care or acute trust.
In their article Rowland et al have balanced risk, governance and cost-effectiveness in a pragmatic and sensible way. Their protocol should be the adopted standard for both procedure and audit for all memory clinics from the moment it is published.
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See pp. 178184, this issue. |
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