Although ischemic stroke is one of the most devastating complications of atrial fibrillation, it can be prevented by effective oral anticoagulation (OAC). Until recently warfarin, a vitamin K antagonist was the only effective OAC in this field. However for the well-known reasons, warfarin is a difficult drug to apply and maintain, both for the patient and physician. In order to overcome these difficulties new oral anticoagulants (NOACs) like, a direct thrombin inhibitor dabigatran and inhibitors of activated factor X rivaroxaban and apixaban are developed as alternatives to warfarin. The efficacy and safety of NOACs vs warfarin, in preventing sroke/TIA and systemic embolism in non-valvular AF is tested in randomized controlled trials (RE-LY, ROCKET AF, ARISTOTLE). Since their efficacy and safety are proven by these trials, the results of the trials had a substantial impact to the writing of new therapy guidelines. Consequently the recent focused update of AF guideline of the ESC suggests NOACs as a strong (even prior to) alternative to warfarin, with the highest level of indication and evidence.
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