Title: Case of the Month:
1Case of the Month
2- 32 y/o post-doctoral student at UT, who moved
from India 3 years ago for academic reasons. - The patient presents with one month of febrile
illness (not quantified), general malaise,
weakness, non-productive cough, weight loss (10
lbs estimation). Few days prior to admission her
symptoms have been worsening, as well as new SOB.
3- The SOB is at rest, but it worsens on exertion.
Denies orthopnea, PND or LE edema. - Because of her symptoms, she went to Student
Health, where a CXR was obtained, a PPD was
placed and PO antibiotics were administered.
4- The CXR preliminary report was read as
cardiomegaly and suspicious appearing right
apex. - The PPD was ().
- The patient was referred from Student Health to
the Med ED for further evaluation.
5- PMHx malaria when she was 10 yoa
- Otherwise negative
- Soc Hx Denies smoking, ETOH or recreational
drugs - Meds Ciprofloxacin 200mg PO BID
- FHx Non-contributory
6- ROS
- Denies CP. Denies SOB prior to current illness.
Good exercise tolerance. - Denies frequent cough, in the past. Denies
hemoptysis. Denies unexplained febrile illness or
weight loss in the past. Denies night sweats. - Denies arthralgias or myalgias.
7- Has been a healthy adult until now.
8- PEX
- BP 115/70 HR 105 T 101 F RR 21 SO2 100
- Patient is in mild distress because of
respiratory difficulty. AAOX3 able to provide
history. - () 7 cm JVD, no carotid bruits heard.
9- Heart RR no S3, S4 no murmurs or rubs.
- Lungs Bibasilar crackles, otherwise clear.
- Abd soft, non tender, BS , no guarding.
- NO LE edema.
10- CXR Cardiomegaly. Bilateral pleural effusions.
NO pulmonary nodules. - CT scan chest Large pericardial effusion.
Moderate bilateral pleural effusions. Bilateral
atelectasis.
11- The cardiology fellow on call, Dr. Z was
called. - He noted on his physical exam a pulsus paradoxus
of 20 mmHg. - He performed STAT EKG and echo.
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13Echocardiogram
14- Na 141 K 3.5 Cl106
- CO2 29 BUN 13 Crea 0.7
- T Prot 6.0 Alb 2.6 Bili 0.7
- SGOT 26 SGPT 63 AlP 175
- GGT 141
- PT 14.7 PTT 34.9 INR 1.16
15- WBC 14.9 (18)K Hgb 11 Hct 33
- Plt 614 K N 77 L 14
- M 9 E 1 MCV 80.9
- MCH 27 RDW 15.1
- Fe 24 TIBC 308
- Ferritin 115
16- CRP 8.1 ESR 98 TSH 1.560
- Anti RNP 36 RF 11.4
- ANA (-) Smith AB 29
- Hep A, B, C (-)
17Pericardial Fluid
- Glucose 41 LDH 2432
- pH 7.5 Protein 6.8
- WBC10.5 K RBC 5.4 K
- N 46 L 14 M 10
- AFB smear (-) Fungal cx (-)
- Aerobic cx (-) AFB cx Pending
18- Adenosine Deaminase 44.4
- PCR for M.tuberculosis (-)
19- Pericardial Biopsy Reactive mesothelial cells,
underlying adipose tissue and paucicellular fibro
connective tissue with foci of chronic
inflammation consistent with chronic
pericarditis. Granulomatous inflammation is not
identified. - Special stains are Pending.
20- Microbiology
- AFB smear (sputum) (-) X 3
- AFB cxs (sputum) Pending
- Blood cxs (-) X3
21SO??
22Tuberculous Pericarditis
- Tuberculous pericarditis occurs in 1 to 2 of
patients with pulmonary tuberculosis - Diagnosis of tuberculous etiology in pericardial
effusions is important since the prognosis is
excellent with specific treatment. - Clinical features may not be distinctive and the
diagnosis could be missed. With the spread of HIV
infection the incidence has increased. -
23- Usually presents as a slowly progressive febrile
illness. When it presents as an acute
pericarditis, which is uncommon, or as cardiac
tamponade, which is frequent, the diagnosis is
more likely to be delayed or missed. - The delay from hospital admission to diagnosis
was 5.2 weeks diagnosis was first made only at
necropsy in 17 of patients.1,2
1.Sagrista-Sauleda J. Am Coll Cardiol
198827248 2. Rooney JJ. Ann Intern Med
197072738
24- Chronic idiopathic effusions in which no etiology
could be established are a common cause of
tamponade varying from 1132. - Without specific treatment the average survival
was 3.7 months in a report from Africa and only
4/20 (20) were alive at six months.
25Pathogenesis
- In a rare case there may be direct spread from
tuberculous pneumonia, it can be seeded in
miliary tuberculosis and in such instances other
organ systems dominate the presentation. - Most often the spread is from the breakdown of
infection in mediastinal nodes directly into the
pericardium and particularly those at the
tracheobronchial bifurcation.
26- Lymphatic drainage of the pericardium is mainly
to the anterior mediastinal, tracheobronchial,
lateropericardial, and posterior mediastinal
lymph nodes and not into the hilar nodes. - Does not show up on routine chest radiographs but
can be seen only on chest computed tomography or
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies.
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28- Sir William Osler concluded that caseous
mediastinal lymph nodes were the usual focus of
pericardial involvement.1 - Rooney et al found that 50 of patients with TPE
who were necropsied had pleural effusion due to
tuberculous pleuritis.2
1.Spodick DH. Arch Intern Med 19569873749 2.
Rooney JJ. Ann Intern Med 197072738
29- Some authors separate tuberculous pericarditis
into four stages - The dry stage
- The effusive stage
- The absorptive phase
- The constrictive phase
Ortbals DW. Arch Intern Med 1979 Feb139(2)231-4
30Diagnosis
31- Characteristics of the pericardial fluid
- The effusion in tuberculous pericarditis is
straw-colored . - It is uniformly an exudate. The protein
concentration is invariably above 3.0 g/dL, and
is greater than 5.0 g/dL in 50 to 77. - LDH level is elevated in approximately 75,
commonly exceeding 500 IU/L.
32- Glucose concentration is usually between 60 and
100 mg/dL. - pH is virtually always less than 7.40.
- The nucleated cell count is usually between 1000
and 6000/mm3. It is lymphocyte-predominant in 60
to 90 of cases. Lymphocytes predominate in
subacute and chronic tuberculous effusions, while
neutrophils predominate in acute effusions. - The fluid rarely contains more than 5
mesothelial cells. The presence of more than 10
eosinophils usually excludes the diagnosis of
tuberculous pericarditis
33- Only 40 to 60 of patients with tuberculous
pericarditis who undergo pericardiocentesis have
acid fast bacilli (which are virtually
diagnostic) on smear.
Strang JI. Lancet 1988 Oct 12(8614)759-64
Fowler NO. Prog Cardiovasc Dis
1973 16323
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35- Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)PCR technology
has been used for nucleic acid amplification.
Overall accuracy of PCR approached the results of
conventional methods. The sensitivity for
pericardial fluid was poor and false positive
results with PCR remain a concern. - Sensitivity in pleural fluid is 42-81.
Cegielskyi JP. J Clin Microbiol 19973532547
Lee JH. Am J Med 200211351921
36- SerodiagnosisELISA A sensitivity of 61 (at 96
specificity) was achieved. It is unlikely that
this technology will be widely applied.
NG TT. Q J Med 19958831720
37- Adenosine deaminase
Adenosine deaminase levels are believed to
reflect T-cell activity. The levels with TPE have
varied from 10303 U/l, and with a cut off level
of 30 U/l the sensitivity was 94 and specificity
68 with a positive predictive accuracy of 80.1 - High ADA levels that may occur in other
conditions, like rheumatoid, empyema,
mesothelioma, lung cancer, parapneumonic, and
hematologic malignancies.
1. Burgess LJ. Chest 20021229005
2. Komsuogluo B. Eur Heart J 199516112630
38- Interferon-gamma
Median concentration in
TPE was gt1000 pg/l and significantly higher than
malignancy or non-tuberculous effusions
(plt0.0005). A cut off value of 200 pg/l for
interferon-gamma resulted in a sensitivity and
specificity of 100 for the diagnosis of TPE.
Burgess LJ. Chest 20021229005
39- Histological evidenceHistological evidence of a
tuberculous granuloma with the demonstration of
acid fast bacilli would be a definite diagnostic
criterion. - The typical granuloma is however not always found
and the pericardial biopsy may show non-specific
findings even when M tuberculosis is found in the
pericardial fluid. Strang et al reported 29 of
non-specific findings on patients whom M
tuberculosis was recovered from the pericardial
fluid.
Strang JIG. Lancet 1988ii75964.
40Myocardium with epicardium and part of the
pericardium. In the epi- and pericardium a
granuloma is present (right half of image), with
caseous necrosis, lymphocytes, and epitheloid
cells. The myocardium (left quarter of image) is
not involved in the inflammatory process.
41- Chest computed tomographyEnlarged mediastinal
lymph nodes gt10 mm detected on chest computed
tomography have been reported recently in
virtually 100 of patients with TPE. They were
found in all 22 patients with TPE and none of a
control group with large viral/idiopathic or
postoperative pericardial effusion.
Cherian G. Am J Med 200311431922
42- Features of Mediastinal Nodes in TPE
- Aortopulmonary, paratracheal, and carinal nodes
most often involved.Typically coalesced (matted)
with hypodense center.Hilar nodes rare and
inconspicuous.Nodes seen only on chest computed
tomography or MRI.Nodes disappear or regress on
specific treatment.
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44- EchocardiographyThe pericardial exudate is thick
and fibrinous with a tendency to form adhesions
and in some instances constriction. On
echocardiography there are patchy deposits with
"fibrinous" strands criss crossing the
pericardial space.
LIU PY. Am J Cardiol 20018711335
45- Large pericardial effusion and inversion of the
right atrium, caused by elevated pericardial
pressure, in late diastole and early systole. - A parasternal short-axis view shows that the
right ventricular outflow tract is compressed in
diastole because of the elevated pericardial
pressure.
Nardell E. N Engl J Med 2004 3511804-1805
46- Culture of mycobacterium tuberculosisRecovery
from the pericardial fluid has varied from
30100. Strang using special techniques was
able to culture M tuberculosis from all patients.
The specimens were cultured in double strength
Kirchner culture medium after bedside inoculation
and also conventional culture in Stonebrink
medium.
Strang JIG. J Infect 1994282514.
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48- Role of corticosteroids
- In active constrictive pericarditis, the
addition of corticosteroids to standard
antituberculous chemotherapy reduced mortality
and the need for subsequent pericardiocentesis. - A similar effect is observed on pericarditis
with effusion, when coupled by initial
pericardial drainage. - Prednisone 60 mg/day for four weeks, 30 mg/day
for four weeks, 15 mg/day for two weeks, then 5
mg/day for week eleven.
49- SUGGESTED APPROACH
- Ascertain if there is a prior history of
tuberculosis, tuberculosis exposure, of prior PPD
skin test reactivity, or if the patient is
immunocompromised. - Perform an intermediate strength PPD skin test on
all patients - If the PPD skin test is positive or the patient
is immunocompromised and an alternate cause (eg,
lupus, malignancy, trauma) is not present,
empiric antituberculous and prednisone therapy
can be initiated. - If, however, there is hemodynamic impairment,
subxiphoid pericardial biopsy and sampling of
pericardial fluid should be performed. - If the biopsy shows granulomatous changes and/or
AFB, smear of the pericardial fluid is positive
for AFB, or the probability of tuberculosis is
highly likely.
50Place you bets!!
51Thank you!