Title: Pericardial disease
1Pericardial disease
- Emma Rees,
- Tutor in Cardiology,
- Biomedical Studies
2Learning Outcomes
- Outline the aetiology, prevalence and mechanism
of pericardial disease - Describe the effects of the pathology on the
patient - Identify investigations used in the diagnosis
- Explain how investigation results aid in
diagnosis - Detail the treatment and prognosis of the
pathology
3Introduction
- Pericardial disease is potentially curable
- Accounts for 7 of all hospitalizations in Africa
- Spectrum of the disease is determined by
epidemiological setting of patient - Western countries largely idiopathic
- Developing countries tuberculous
- But there are a large number of diseases that can
cause it.
4What do you know about the pericardium?
- What is it?
- Where is it?
- What is its function?
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6What is it?
- Fibrous sac surrounding heart-dense network of
collagen fibres - Serous membrane two continuous layers separated
by a small amount of fluid lubricant (10-20mls
straw coloured) - Layers are called visceral and parietal
- Visceral is inner layer (epicardium)
- Parietal is continuous with diaphragm and outer
walls of great arteries
7Where is it?
- Surrounds the heart
- Continuous with the great arteries and the
diaphragm
8What is its function?
- Stabilises the position of the heart within the
chest - Prevents friction between the moving heart and
adjacent structures - Allows for small acute changes in size and shape
but limits ventricular filling (not the case in
chronic setting)
9Pericardial disease
- May be primary and acute
- or
- Chronic
- - Constrictive
- - Effusive
- - Or constrictive-effusive
10Acute pericarditis
11Causes
- Idiopathic (idio and pathy) 86
- Infective (viral or bacterial) 7
- Following a myocardial infarction or cardiac
surgery (Dresslers syndrome) - Radiation therapy
- Neoplastic disease (commonly lung or breast) 6
- Connective tissue disease
- Figures from Permanyer-Miralda et al 1985
12Signs, Symptoms and Investigations
- Think about how an inflamed, thickened
pericardium might affect the hearts function
how can we diagnose this? - Clinical examination
- Auscultation
- Chest x-ray
- ECG
- Echo
- Catheter laboratory investigations
13Clinical Examination
- Retrosternal chest pain sharp worse on insp and
lying flat - Friction rub (high pitched scratching noise)
- Raised jugular venous pressure
14ECG (acute pericarditis)
15ECG differential diagnosis - MI
- What leads is the ST elevation in?
- What shape is the elevation?
- Are there Q waves?
- Do the ST T changes evolve with time?
- History of the patient
- Cardiac enzymes etc
- But remember that you can get more than one
pathology at the same time!
16Clinical signs differential diagnosis - pleurisy
- Pleuritic pain has similar sharp quality but is
usually more specific in location - Pleural rub is heard over the area where the pain
occurs
17Diagnosis of pericarditis
- Patient will have 2 or more of the following
- Characteristic chest pain
- Pericardial friction rub (auscultation)
- ECG showing characteristic ST elevation (caused
by epicardial injury)
18Treatment
- NB. Search for the underlying disease
- No good evidence from randomised controlled
trials - Patients require bed rest
- NSAID (aspirin, indomethacin) are generally
accepted as effective for relieving symptoms of
chest pain - NSAID ketorolac tromethamine rapid results
- Colchicine may be a useful adjunct in those who
do not respond to NSAIDs alone
19Prognosis
- Pericarditis is usually a benign disorder
- Diagnosis relates to underlying cause
- But any cause can lead to an effusion and
tamponade which can lead to death - Pericarditis can also progress to pericardial
constriction and heart failure
20Chronic constrictive pericarditis
21Causes
- Tuberculous constrictive pericarditis was common
cause of constriction pre 1960 decline in
incidence. - Post-radiotherapy constriction features
prominently today along with post-surgical
causes. - Needs to be differentiated from restrictive
cardiomyopathy when making diagnosis.
22Investigations
- As for acute pericarditis
- Clinical examination prime symptoms likely to
be RHF and SOB - ECG may not show characteristic ST elevation
- CXR may see calcification and helps to rule out
coexisting effusion - Echo to identify haemodynamic effects on heart
and coexisting effusion - Auscultation may reveal a friction rub
- MRI/CT scan data about the thickness of the
pericardium. Cine CT is a new technique which
also gives info about the effects of physiology
as well.
23Kussmauls sign
- Normal subjects inspiration causes a decrease
in chest pressure. Increase in venous return
JVP falls - Constrictive pericarditis Increased venous
return cannot be accommodated in RV because of
high EDP - So JVP rises on inspiration
24Chest x-ray
- Occasionally calcification noted
- More useful to determine whether there is a
coexisting effusion (fluid accumulation)
25Echo findings
- Normal subjects increase in TV flow velocity on
inspiration, and decrease in MV flow - Due to increased vascular capacity of lungs
venous return and RV output increases while
return to LA is reduced - This is exaggerated in tamponade/sig constriction
RV output cant increase because of high EDP
pulmonary return is reduced further
26Treatment
- The only effective treatment for chronic
constrictive pericarditis is complete surgical
resection of the pericardium. - Mortality for procedure ranges from 5-16
- Symptomatic improvement in 90
- 5 year survival rate is 74-87 depending on
co-morbidities pre-op
27Pericardial effusion (may be acute or
chronic,Global or localised)
28Pericardial effusion
- Spectrum of causes of effusion is similar to
acute pericarditis - More likely than constriction following MI and
cardiac surgery - Can coexist with acute pericarditis and chronic
constrictive disease
29Causes
- Major causes are post cardiac surgery and
- Neoplastic disease
- Gradual accumulation of fluid (chronic) permits
progressive stretching of pericardium - Patient may develop a substantial fluid without
significant increase in intrapericardial pressure
30- Rapid accumulation of fluid (acute) leads to
critical elevation of intrapericardial pressure
31Pathophysiology
- Significantly increased intrapericardial pressure
impedes diastolic filling of the ventricles - Therefore in order for the ventricles to fill the
end-diastolic pressure must exceed the
pericardial pressure - Global effusion pericardial pressure is equal
around heart - Therefore both ventricles have to increase EDP to
same amount for ventricles to fill
32- Normal difference in diastolic pressures between
RV and LV is lost - As the pericardial effusion worsens the EDP
cannot raise significantly to maintain cardiac
output
33Investigations and clinical signs
- Clinical examination SOB, orthopnoea,
tachycardia (varying degrees) - Auscultation may have muffled heart sounds
- ECG may show low amplitude QRS complexes and
alternating axis - CXR globular appearance to heart and therefore
increased cardiothoracic ratio - Echo size of effusion and haemodynamic effect
of it
34Pericardial effusion
35Echocardiography
36Cath lab- diastolic equalization of left and
right heart pressures
37High RA pressures
38Treatment
- Depends on the cause and nature
- If acute the cause is treated and the patient
monitored - If persistent problem or life threatening more
dramatic action is called for
39Cardiac tamponade
40Cardiac tamponade(complication of pericardial
effusion)
- This is a clinical diagnosis
- - It is based upon the patients symptoms
- Investigations may be performed to confirm the
suspected cause of the symptoms (pericardial
effusion).
41- Occurs when the fluid accumulation around the
heart impairs filling to such an extent that
there is haemodynamic compromise. - It is a medical emergency and must be treated
promptly. - Risk of death depends upon speed of diagnosis,
treatment and underlying cause of the tamponade.
42How much fluid is a problem?
- Depends on rate of accumulation and compliance of
the pericardium - 150ml that accumulated quickly could cause a
problem - 1000ml that accumulates very slowly may be
tolerated fairly well
43Signs and symptoms
- Acutely unwell
- Significant SOB, rapid breathing
- Tachycardia
- Orthopnoea
- Cold, clammy extremities because of poor
perfusion - Kussmauls sign
44Investigations (used to confirm only)
- CXR globular heart
- ECG (findings are suggestive not diagnostic)
- - Sinus tachycardia
- - Low voltage QRS complexes
- - Electrical alternans (not always)
- Echo
- - Size and location of effusion
- - Any evidence of diastolic collapse
- - Swinging of the heart
- - Decrease of insp. flow across MV
45Treatment
- Medical emergency intensive care environment
needed. - Oxygen
- Volume expansion
- Bed rest with leg elevation
- Inotropic drugs if necessary
46Pericardiocentesis
- Pericardiocentesis is the definitive therapy to
remove the excessive fluid - Commonly performed in the cath lab but may be
done blind in an intensive care environment
47Pericardiocentesis
48How is it done?
- Patient lies on the table with the upper body
elevated to a 60 degree angle. Limb ECG leads
attached. - Xyphisternum puncture site is cleaned with an
antiseptic solution and local anaesthetic is
injected to numb area. - Patient is instructed to remain still
- Physician inserts a large needle with syringe
attached into chest wall until pericardial sac is
reached
49- The needle is then pushed through the tough
pericardial sac (patient may experience some
pain/pressure at this point) - A guidewire is inserted through the needle and
the needle withdrawn - A catheter can then be passed over the guidewire
and into the pericardial space - This can be used for continuous drainage.
50Case study
- Mr B. 64 years old
- Recent course of radiotherapy for lung tumour
- History of chest pain over the last week,
shortness of breath and ankle oedema. - What else do you want to know?
- How would you investigate him?
51Extra information
- Sharp chest pain worse on deep inspiration
- No added heart valve murmurs, pericardial
friction rub - Elevated JVP
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54Echo findings
- Medium sized pericardial effusion 1.5cm along
anterior and inferior RV free wall. - IVC dilated with reduced insp. collapse
- RVSP estimated at 40mmHg JVP.
- No obvious signs of respiratory variation in
LV/RV filling patterns
55What do you want to do with this patient?
- Admit. Bed-rest.
- NSAIDs to relieve the pain
- Effusion does not need draining unless cardiac
tamponade develops - Monitor - does pain ease with treatment
- Needs repeat echo to assess effusion size
56What happened next
- Mr B deteriorated over following 2 days
- Became acutely unwell
- Severe sob, tachypnoea
- Tachycardia
- Hypotensive
- Cold and clammy extremities
- What do you want to do?
57Treatment
- Give oxygen
- monitor ECG and BP
- Elevate legs
- Consider volume expansion
- Seek expert help!
- Consider moving to an intensive care environment
- Urgent echo
- Assess need for Pericardiocentesis
58Follow-up
- Monitor for signs of recurrence
- May develop signs of constrictive pericarditis in
future
59Learning outcomes revisited!
- Outline the aetiology, prevalence and mechanism
of pericardial disease - Describe the effects of the pathology on the
patient - Identify investigations used in the diagnosis
- Explain how investigation results aid in
diagnosis - Detail the treatment and prognosis of the
pathology
60References
- Timmis (1997) Essential Cardiology
- Rimmington Chambers (1998) Echocardiography A
Practical Guide for Reporting - Yusuf et al. (Eds.) (2003) Evidence-Based
Cardiology - Levick (2003) An Introduction to Cardiovascular
Physiology - Jenkins Gerred (1997) ECGs by Example
- Martini (2004) Fundamentals of Anatomy and
Physiology - Website www.emedicine.com