Title: Constrictive Pericarditis
1Constrictive Pericarditis
- Nisha I. Parikh, MD MPH
- July 21st 2009
- Echo Conference
2Summary of Talk
- Background
- Clinical features
- Echocardiographic diagnosis
- M-mode
- Doppler
- Constriction versus restriction
- Treatment and prognosis
3Historical Perspective
- The history of constrictive pericarditis is
replete with famous names in medicine - Richard Lower described a patient with dyspnea
and an intermittent pulse in 1669 - Lancisi first reported on the constrictive
syndrome in 1828 - Corrigan described the pericardial knock in 1842
- Kussmaul described his sign and the associated
paradoxical pulse in 1873.
4Pericardium
Parietal and visceral layers
Usually 5-10 mL fluid
5Pericardium
- When larger amounts of fluid accumulate
(pericardial effusion) or when the pericardium
becomes scarred and inelastic, one of three
pericardial compressive syndromes may occur
6- 1. Cardiac tamponade characterized by the
accumulation of pericardial fluid under pressure. - 2. Constrictive pericarditis result of scarring
and consequent loss of elasticity of the
pericardial sac. Typically chronic. The
pathological changes are inflammation, sometimes
calcification. Grossly, pericardium thicker than
normal -80 of time. - 3. Effusive-constrictive pericarditis
characterized by constrictive physiology with a
coexisting pericardial effusion, usually with
tamponade.
7Epidemiology
- 9 of patients with acute pericarditis for any
reason go on to develop constrictive physiology. - Acute pericarditis is only clinically diagnosed
in 1 in 1,000 hospital admissions - Frequency of a diagnosis of constrictive
pericarditis is less than 1 in 10,000 hospital
admissions.
8Constrictive Pericarditis - HPI
- 67 presented with symptoms of heart failure
(HF) - 8 with chest pain
- 6 with abdominal symptoms
- 4 with atrial arrhythmia
- 5 with symptoms of cardiac tamponade
9Constrictive Pericarditis - Etiology
- Idiopathic or viral 42 to 49
- Post cardiac surgery 11 to 37
- Post radiation therapy 9 to 31
- Connective tissue disorder 3 to 7
- Postinfectious (tuberculous or purulent
pericarditis) 3 to 6 - Miscellaneous causes (malignancy, trauma,
drug-induced, asbestosis, sarcoidosis, uremic
pericarditis) 1 to 10
10Constricitve Pericarditis - PE
- Elevated JVP
- Peripheral edema
- Ascites
- Hepatomegaly
- Pleural effusion
- S3
- Pulsus paradoxus
- Kussmauls sign
- Cachexia- late stages
11Kussmauls sign
- The observation of a jugular venous pressure
(JVP) that rises with inspiration. - Respiratory variation in intrathoracic pressure
with inspiration is not transmitted to the heart
chambers.
12Physiology of constriction
- In the pericardial compressive syndromes, the
pericardium is inelastic and total cardiac volume
cannot change - The result is enhanced ventricular interaction
or ventricular interdependence
13Physiology of constriction
- Pericardial constriction leads to impairment of
ventricular filling, usually affecting all four
cardiac chambers, preventing ventricular filling
in mid and late diastole. - As a result, the majority of ventricular filling
occurs rapidly in early diastole and the
ventricular volume does not increase after the
end of the early filling period.
14Pericardial Effusion
15Pericardial effusion
- M-mode Cannot determine volume of accumulated
fluid accurately
16Pericardial thickening
- This can be visualized by transesophageal echo
(often requiring multiple views), however, this
is best seen using other imaging modalities such
as CT or MRI.
17Calcified Pericardium
18Pericardial calcifications CT
19Pericardial calcification on echo
- Normal pericardium is highly reflective
- Bright pericardial echo cannot alone diagnose
constrictive pericarditis
20Specific echo exam for constriction
- Neither sensitive nor specific
- Must diagnose via a combination of physical exam/
history findings and echo findings
21M-mode findings in constriction
- Abrupt relaxation of the posterior wall with
flattening of endocardial motion during diastole - Abnormal septal motion
- Mimics conduction disturbances
- Mimics RV p/v overload
- Early diastolic notching followed by paradoxical
and then normal motion of the ventricular septum
22diastolic septal bounce
- Thought to be due to the rapid filling during
early diastole leading to asymmetrical filling of
the right and left ventricals which creates a
fluctuating pressure gradient that manifests as
an abrupt shift of the septum.
23? Subtle septal bounce
24Bouncy Septum
25Dilation and lack of respiratory variation in IVC
26Doppler echo findings in constriction
- Mitral inflow
- Exaggerated E/A ratio
- Short deceleration time
- Exaggerated respiratory variation in E-wave
velocity gt25 - Seen more reliably when patients are well
hydrated - Can also be seen in pulmonary disease
- Hepatic Veins
- Expiratory increase in diastolic flow reversal
27Hepatic flow reversal
- Secondary to elevated right atrial pressures.
Hepatic vein doppler reveals pressure tracings
significant for a prominant "a" wave and
prominent "y" descent.
28Atrial dilation
- Mild
- Secondary to elevated atrial pressures
- More severe atrial dilatation seen in
restrictive cardiomyopathy.
29Constrictive Pericarditis other tests?
- CT not very sens/spec
- Cardiac MRI growing in favor
- BNP usually only a mild elevation due to
limited wall stretch - Cath GOLD STANDARD
30Effusive constrictive pericarditis
- Combination of tamponade and constriction
- Common etiologies malignancy and radiation
therapy - Pericardial thickening may prevent RA collapse
- Hemodynamic compromise and JVD persist even after
tap
31Effusive Constrictive Pericarditis- Prospective
Study
- Methods From 1986 through 2001, all patients with
effusiveconstrictive pericarditis were
prospectively evaluated. Combined
pericardiocentesis and cardiac catheterization
were performed in all patients, and
pericardiectomy was performed in those with
persistent constriction. Follow-up ranged from 1
month to 15 years (median, 7 years). - Results
- 1184 patients with pericarditis were evaluated,
- 218 with tamponade.
- 190 underwent combined pericardiocentesis and
catheterization. - Fifteen of these patients had effusiveconstrictiv
e pericarditis and were included in the study.
All patients presented with clinical tamponade - however, concomitant constriction was recognized
in only seven patients. - At catheterization, all patients had elevated
intrapericardial pressure (median, 12 mm Hg
interquartile range, 7 to 18) and elevated right
atrial and end-diastolic right and left
ventricular pressures. After pericardiocentesis,
the intrapericardial pressure decreased (median
value, 5 mm Hg interquartile range, 5 to 0),
whereas right atrial and end-diastolic right and
left ventricular pressures, although slightly
reduced, remained elevated, with a dipplateau
morphology. The causes were diverse, and death
was mainly related to the underlying disease. - Pericardiectomy was required in seven patients,
all of whom had involvement of the visceral
pericardium. Three patients had spontaneous
resolution. - Conclusions Effusiveconstrictive pericarditis is
an uncommon pericardial syndrome that may be
missed in some patients who present with
tamponade. Although evolution to persistent
constriction is frequent, idiopathic cases may
resolve spontaneously. In our opinion, extensive
epicardiectomy is the procedure of choice in
patients requiring surgery.
32Constriction versus Restriction
- Restrictive Cardiomyopathy
- Pure diastolic dysfunction
- Systolic function preserved
- Usually due to infiltrative process
- Several echo signs overlap with constrictive
pericarditis
33Restrictive versus Constrictive
Restrictive Cardiomyopathy Constrictive Pericarditis
History Infiltrative disease Pericarditis, trauma, surgery
Mantle radiation, cardiac surgery Mantle radiation, cardiac surgery
Respiratory effects No bulging Increased ventricular interaction- bulging of the septum towards LV
CMR C/w infiltrative disease Increased pericardial thickness (gt 5 mm
34Comparison of Pericardial Constriction and
Restrictive Cardiomyopathy
Constrictive Pericarditis Restrictive Cardiomyopathy
Right Atrial Pressure
RV/LV filling pressures RVLV LV gt RV
PASP Mild elevation 35-40 mmHg Moderate-to-severe ( 60 mmHg)
2D Echo Pericardial thickening, no effusion LVH, normal systolic function
Doppler Echo E gt a on LV inflow Prominent y descent in hepatic vein Pulm venous flow prominent a wave, reduced systolic phase Resp variation in IVRT and E velocity Atria mildly enlarged Early in disease E lt a Late in disease E gt a Constant IVRT Absence of significant respiratory variation Marked enlarged atria
35Tissue Doppler to distinguish entities
Dimunitive E lt8 cm/s
E similar to E gt12cm/s
36Treatment
- Definitive treatment is surgical
- Earlier the better
- Extensive decortication favored, especially at
the diaphragmatic-ventricular contact regions. - Complications
- excessive bleeding
- atrial and ventricular arrhythmias
- ventricular wall ruptures.
- Published surgical mortality 5-15.
- Perioperative mortality rate (within 30 days) was
found to be 6.1. - progressive heart failure
- Sepsis
- renal failure
- respiratory failure
- arrhythmia
37Post-op course
- 80-90 achieve NYHA class I or II
postoperatively. - Abnormal diastolic filling (which can be
correlated with clinical status) often remains - Only 60 of patients have complete normalization
of cardiac hemodynamics. - In 58 patients who underwent total pericardectomy
for constriction, 30 still had some significant
symptoms after 4 years. - These patients were more likely to have a
persistent restrictive or constrictive pattern to
their transmitral and transtricuspid Doppler
signals as determined by respiratory recording.
38Survival post pericardiectomy
- Long-term survival after pericardiectomy depends
on the underlying cause. - Idiopathic with best prognosis (88 survival at 7
yrs), - Constriction due to cardiac surgery (66 at 7
years). - Worst prognosis occurs in postradiation
constrictive pericarditis (27 survival at 7
years). (likely represents confounding
comorbidities). - Predictors of poor outcomes in patients who
undergo pericardiectomy - history of prior radiation
- worsening renal function
- pulmonary hypertension
- systolic heart failure
- Hyponatremia
- advanced age.
39