Today, there is talk about an epidemic of atrial fibrillation,and physicians caring for patients with this common arrhythmiaface a bewildering array of treatment options. Contrast thissituation with that of 1900, when no one understood the arrhythmia'smechanism or realized that it occurred in humans. One hundredyears ago, in 1906, two publications one from the Netherlandsand the other from the United States revealed that thearrhythmia, then called "auricular fibrillation," did indeedaffect humans, that it was in fact common in patients with heartdisease, and that it could be identified by means of . . . [Full Text of this Article]
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Dr. Fye is a professor of medicine and the history of medicine and the director of the Mayo Clinic Center for the History of Medicine, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN.
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