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Diseases of the Pericardium

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Title: Diseases of the Pericardium


1
Diseases of the Pericardium
  • David L. Hykes, Jr. DO

2
Pericardium and Pericardial Diseases
  • The pericardium is a protective sac around the
    heart which contains a thin layer of fluid that
    reduces friction during heart function.
  • Pericardial diseases result from a variety of
    etiologies which manifest themselves as
    pericarditis and pericardial fusion.

3
Etiologies of Pericardial Disease
  • Infectious
  • Viral (coxsackievirus A and B, echovirus, mumps,
    adenovirus, hepatitis, HIV, influenza, varicella,
    infectious mononucleosis)
  • Bacterial (pneumococcus, streptococcus,
    staphylococcus, gonococcus, legionella, shigella,
    salmonella, hemophilus, meningococcus, tularemia,
    mycoplasma)
  • Fungal (histoplasmosis, coccidoidymycosis,
    candida, blastomycosis, nocardia, aspergillosis)
  • Other (tuberculosis, toxoplasmosis, amebiasis,
    syphilis, Chagas disease, filariasis)

4
Etiologies of Pericardial Disease
  • Neoplastic
  • Myxedema
  • Uremia
  • Trauma (hemopericardium)
  • Transmural myocardial infarction and Dresslers
    syndrome
  • Rheumatologic
  • Rheumatoid arthritis, SLE, scleroderma, Whipples
    disease, Ankylosing spondylitis, Wegeners
    granulomatosis, gout, amyloidosis, polymyositis

5
Etiologies of Pericardial Disease
  • Other systemic diseases
  • Sarcoidosis, hemochromatosis, Gauchers disease,
    pulmonary infiltration with eosinophilia
  • Drug induced
  • Procainamide, hydralazine, quinidine, isoniazid,
    penicillin, streptomycin, methysergid,
    daunorubicin
  • Radiation

6
Acute Pericarditis
  • Symptoms
  • Chest pain
  • Develops suddenly and is severe and constant
  • Pain worsens with inspiration
  • Low-grade fever
  • Weakness/fatigue

7
Acute Pericarditis
  • Findings
  • Pericardial friction rub (usually triphasic
    systolic and early diastolic components and a
    later third component associated with atrial
    contraction)
  • Electrocardiogram shows diffuse ST segment
    elevation, depression of the PR segment (usually
    the earliest manifestation), sinus tachycardia

8
Acute Pericarditis
  • Treatment
  • Salicylates (aspirin dose 4 g to 6 g)
  • NSAIDS (usually indomethacin 25 mg QID)
  • Corticosteroids (usually reserved for severe
    cases unresponsive to therapy, typically
    prednisone at a 40 mg to 60 mg dose)

9
Acute Pericarditis
10
Subacute Chronic Pericarditis
  • Acute pericarditis progresses to subacute and
    chronic in rare circumstances
  • These cases are usually secondary to bacterial,
    viral, rheumatoid, radiation-induced, or
    dialysis-related
  • These conditions usually present with some degree
    of cardiac tamponade

11
PericarditisSubacute Chronic
12
Pericardial Effusion Cardiac Tamponade
  • Etiology of percardial effusions
  • Serous
  • CHF, hypoalbuminemia, viral pericarditis,
    bacterial pericarditis, tuberculosis
    pericarditis, irradiation
  • Blood
  • Neoplasm, trauma, acute MI, cardiac rupture,
    uremia, coagulopathy
  • Iatrogenic cardiac operation, cardiac
    catheterization, anticoagulants, chemotherapeutic
    agents
  • Lymph
  • Neoplasm, congenital, idiopathic, thoracic duct
    obstruction

13
Cause of Hemopericardial effusion
  • Cardiac perforation

14
Pericardial Effusion
  • The pericardium has the capacity to accommodate
    volumes exceeding 2,000 ml when develops
    gradually
  • Effusions developing acutely may cause cardiac
    tamponade with as little as 200 ml of fluid
  • As pericardial pressure rises, right atrial and
    central venous pressure increase. Thus, central
    venous pressure reflects the intrapericardial
    pressure

15
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16
Diagnosis of Effusion
  • EKG
  • Echocardiography
  • CT Scan
  • MRI

17
Diagnosis of Pericardial Tamponade
  • Becks Triad
  • Hypotension
  • Small, quiet heart
  • Increasing systemic venous pressure
  • Four diagnostic steps
  • Elevated jugular venous pressure
  • Pulsus paradoxicus
  • Evidence of pericardial fluid
  • Drainage leads to reversal of tamponade

18
Cardiac Tamponade
19
Cardiac Tamponade
  • Echocardiogram findings
  • Right atrial collapse
  • Right ventrical early diastolic collapse
  • Increase in right ventrical dimensions with
    inspiration and decrease in left ventrical
    dimensions with inspiration
  • Increase in blood flow velocity through the
    tricuspid and pulmonic valves and decrease in
    mitral and aortic valve flow velocity with
    inspiration
  • Respiratory variations in pulmonary and hepatic
    venous flow

20
Pericardial Effusion on Echocardiogram
21
Pericardial Tamponade Treatment
  • Circulating blood volume expansion
  • 500 to 1,000 ml over 10 to 20 minutes
  • Positive inotropes
  • Dobutamine 3 to 10 mcg/kg/min
  • Dopamine 3 to 10 mcg/kg/min
  • Vasodilators
  • Hydralazine
  • Nitroprusside
  • Corticosteroids
  • For mild cases such as Dresslers Syndrome

22
Pericardial Tamponade Treatment
  • Pericardial drainage
  • Needle pericardiocentesis
  • Percutaneous balloon pericardiotomy
  • Pericardial window
  • Pericardial resection

23
Pericardiocentesis
24
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25
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26
Questions
27
References
  • Baljepally R, Spodick DH PR-segment deviation as
    the initial electrocardiographic response in
    acute pericarditis. Am J Cardiol 811505, 1998
  • Spodick DH Pathophysiology of cardiac tamponade.
    Chest 113 1372, 1998
  • Merce J, et al Correlation between clinical and
    Doppler echocardiographic findings in patients
    with moderate and large pericardial effusion
    implications for the diagnosis of cardiac
    tamponade. Am Heart J 138759, 1999
  • Allen KB, et al Pericardial effusion subxiphoid
    pericardiostomy versus percutaneous catheter
    drainage Ann Thorac Surg 67437, 1999
  • Hancock EW Cardiology XIII diseases of the
    pericardium, cardiac tumors, and cardiac trauma.
    Scientific America, 2001

28
References
  • Larose E, et al Prolonged distress and clinical
    deterioration before pericardial drainage in
    patients with cardiac tamponade. Can J Cardiol
    16331, 2000
  • Palacios I Current treatment options in
    cardiovascular medicine. 179-89, 1999
  • Roosen J, et al Comparison of premortem clinical
    diagnoses in critically ill patients and
    subsequent autopsy findings. Mayo Clin Proc
    75562, 2000
  • Ziskind AA, et al Percutaneous balloon
    pericardiotomy for the treatment of cardiac
    tamponade and large pericardial effusions
    description of technique and report of the first
    50 cases. J Am Coll Cardiol 211, 1993
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