Pericardial Disease
Pericardial Disease
Pericardial Disease
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Pericardial Disease
Acute Pericarditis
Chronic Relapsing Pericarditis
Constrictive Pericarditis
Cardiac Tamponade
Localized and Low Pressure
Tamponade
Restrictive Cardiomyopathy
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Pericardial Anatomy
Two major components
serosa (viceral pericardium)
mesothelial monolayer
facilitate fluid and ion exchange
fibroa (parietal pericardium)
fibrocollagenous tissue
Pericardial Fluid
15 - 50 ml of clear plasma ultrafiltrate
Ligamentous attachments
to the sternum, vertebral column, diaphragm
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Pericardial Physiology
not needed to sustain life
physiologic functions
limit cardiac dilatation
maintain normal ventricular compliance
reduce friction to cardiac movement
barrier to inflammation
limit cardiac displacement
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Pericardial Inflammation
pathogenesis
Contiguous spread
lungs, pleura, mediastinal lymph nodes,
myocardium, aorta, esophagus, liver
Hematogenous spread
septicemia, toxins, neoplasm, metabolic
Lymphangetic spread
Traumatic or irradiation
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Pericardial Inflammation
pathology
inflammation provokes a fibrinous
exudate with or without serous
effusion
the normal transparent and glistening
pericardium is turned into a dull,
opaque, and sandy sac
can cause pericardial scarring with
adhesions and fibrosis
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Acute Pericarditis
common causes
Outpatient setting
usually idiopathic
probably due to viral infections
Coxsackie A and B (highly cardiotropic)
are the most common viral cause of
pericarditis and myocarditis
Others viruses: mumps, varicella-zoster,
influenza, Epstein-Barr, HIV
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Acute Pericarditis
common causes
Inpatient setting
T = Trauma, TUMOR
U = Uremia
M = Myocardial infarction (acute, post)
Medications (hydralazine, procain)
O = Other infections (bacterial, fungal, TB)
R = Rheumatoid, autoimmune disorder
Radiation
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Acute Pericarditis
Diagnostic Clues
History
sudden onset of anterior chest pain that
is pleuritic and substernal
Physical exam
presence of two- or three-component rub
ECG
most important laboratory clue
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Acute Pericarditis
ECG features
ST-segment elevation
reflecting epicardial inflammation
leads I, II, aVL, and V3-V6
lead aVR usually shows ST depression
ST concave upward
ST in AMI concave downward like a dome
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Acute Pericarditis
Management
Treat underlying cause
Analgesic agents
codeine 15-30 mg q 4-6 hr
Anti-inflmmatory agents
ASA 648 mg q 3-4 hrs
NSAID (indomethacin 25-50 mg qid)
Corticosteroids are symptomatically
effective , but preferably avoided
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Dresslers Syndrome
Described by Dressler in 1956
fever, pericarditis, pleuritis
(typically with a low grade fever and a
pericardial friction rub)
occurs in the first few days to several
weeks following MI or heart surgery
incidence of 6-25%
treat with high-dose aspirin
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Acute Pericarditis
Differential Diagnosis
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Case Study 1
A 56-year-old man develops recurrent
chest discomfort 5 days after an anterior
myocardial infarction, which was managed
initially with tissue plasminogen activator.
The pain is sharp and positional, radiating
toward both clavicles. It is different from
the pain associated with his infarction.
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Case Study 1
Physical Exam:
Afebrile
No pericardial friction rub
ECG:
mild PR depression in lead 2
no significant change in the evolution
pattern of his Q-wave anteroseptal
myocardial infarction
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Case Study 1
The most appropriate therapy for this
patient is:
Salicylates
Indomethacin
Corticosteroids
Colchicine
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Case Study 2
A 36-year old woman presents to the
ER for the second time in a week
with pleuritic chest and left shoulder
discomfort and a low-grade fever.
She had been in an argument with
her boy friend 6 days earlier during
which he grabbed her by both
shoulders and shook her violently.
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Case Study 2
HR 82, BP 94/70.
Left iris is green, right is blue
She is slender, has a straight back,
long fingers, high-arched palate, and
slight pectus excavatum.
A pericardial friction rub is present.
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Case Study 2
A chest radiograph shows an
increased cardiac silhouette and a
small left pleural effusion.
ECG shows NSR with diffuse J-point
elevation and PR-segment
depression in lead 2.
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Case Study 2
Which one of the following tests
should you order?
An erythrocyte sedimentation rate
A creatine kinase determination
An echocardiogram
An antinuclear antibody
A D-dimer
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Constrictive Pericarditis
rarely develop after an episode of
acute idiopathic pericarditis
more likely to develop after subacute
pericarditis with effusion that evolve
over several weeks
more frequent after purulent
bacterial or tuberculous pericarditis
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Constrictive Pericarditis
in the United States
Idiopathic
radiotherapy
cardiac surgery
connective tissue disorders
dialysis
bacterial infection
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Tuberculous Pericarditis
Incidence of pericarditis in patients
with pulmonary TB ranged from 1-8%
Physical findings: fever, pericardial
friction rub, hepatomegaly
TB skin test usually positive
Fluid smear for TB often negative
Pericardial biopsy more definitive
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Constrictive Pericarditis
Physical Findings
Jugular veins
prominent X and Y descent
with inspiration (Kussmauls sign)
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Constrictive Pericarditis
Diagnosis
often not recognized in its early
phases by exam, x-ray, ECG, echo
tendency to overlook elevated JVP
subacute chronic
diastolic knock
+
++
Kussmauls
+
++
paradoxical pulse
++
++
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Constrictive Pericarditis
catheterization findings
Right and left heart pressure are
measured simultaneously
right and left ventricular diastolic
pressure are elevated and nearly equal;
may show classic square root sign
RA pressure has steep X and Y
descents and may rise during
inspiration (Kussmauls sign)
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Case Study 3
A 42-year old man presented
because of increasing abdominal
girth and lower extremity edema. A
decade ago he underwent treatment
for Hodgkins disease that included
mantle field radiation therapy and
MOPP chemotherapy.
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Case Study 3
HR 84, BP 100/70
JVD not observed at 45 degrees
Absent vocal fremitus at right base
Heart sound is distant
An early-mid diastolic sound
3+ pitting edema bilaterally
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Case Study 3
What is the most likely diagnosis?
Effusive pericarditis
Occult constrictive pericarditis
Constrictive pericarditis
Idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy
Restrictive cardiomyopathy
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suppurative
pyogenic infection with cellular debris and large
number of leukocytes
hemorrhagic
occurs with any type of pericarditis
especially with infections and malignancies
serosanguinous
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Dignostic Evaluation
Chest x-ray
usually requires > 200 ml of fluid
cannot distinguish between pericardial
effusion and cardiomegly
Echocardiography
standard for diagnosing pericardial effusion
convenient, highly reliable, cost effective
false positives (M-mode)- left pleural effusion,
epicardial fat, tumor tissue, pericardial cysts
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Noncompressing Effusion
asymptomatic unless they are large
enough to compress adjacent organs
dysphagia
cough
dyspnea
hoarseness
hiccups
abdminal fullness
nausea
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Electrical alternans
alternating amplitude of the QRS
produced by heart swinging motion
also seen in PSVT, HTN, ischemia
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Cardiac Tamponade
Decompensated cardiac compression
from increased intracardaic press
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Cardiac Tamponade
Early stage
mild to moderate elevation of central
venous pressure
Advanced stage
intrapericardial pressure
ventricular filling, stroke volume
hypotension
impaired organ perfusion
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Becks Triad
Described in 1935 by thoracic
surgeon Claude S. Beck
3 features of acute tamponade
Decline in systemic arterial pressure
Elevation in systemic venous pressure
(e.g. distended neck vein)
A small, quiet heart
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Cardiac Tamponade
Bedside Diagnosis
Elevated jugular venous pressure
Paradoxical pulse
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Pulsus Paradoxus
an exaggerated drop in blood pressure
with inspiration (>10mmHg)
tamponade without pulsus
atrial septal defect
aortic insufficiency
LVH with LVEDP
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Echocardiography
Pericardial effusion
highly reliable
Cardiac tamponade
RA and RV diastolic collapse
reduced chamber size
distension of the inferior vena cava
exaggerated respiratory variation of the
mitral and tricuspid valve flow velocities
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Pericardiocentesis
Diagnostic tap
usually not indicated
rarely have positive cytology or
infection that can be diagnosed
Therapeutic drainage
indicated for significant elevation of the
central venous pressure
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Pericardial Window
Balloon dilatation of a needle
pericardiostomy
subxyphoid surgical pericardiostomy
video-assisted thoracoscopy with
localized pericardial resection
anterolateral thoracotomy with
parietal pericardial resection
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Restrictive Cardiomyopathy
Differentiation from constrictive
pericarditis may be difficult from
intracardiac pressure tracings
clues from history, physical exam,
ECG, echo, CT and MR scan
amyloidosis is most likely to
simulate constrictive pericarditis
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