Acute Pericarditis Flashcards

1
Q

What can AP occur secondary to?

A

Viral infection (chest infection potentially may be present)

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2
Q

AP symptoms?

A

Acute, sharp, central chest pain
Radiates to left arm
Worse on inspiration/at night (positional)

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3
Q

AP investigation findings?

A

Auscultation - HEART sounds may be soft, indicating a pericardial effusion is underway (like the same for breath sounds and pleural effusion)
CXR - may confirm pericardial effusion by demonstrating a globular heart

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4
Q

What is cardiac tamponade?

A

Haemorrhage into the pericardium

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5
Q

What happens in cardiac tamponade and how is it caused?

A

Caused by a penetrating wound to the heart
Pericardium is fibrous and inelastic thus the cascade:
Bleeding into pericardium –> reduced space for diastolic heart to expand into –> reduced cardiac output –> death if untreated

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6
Q

How is cardiac tamponade treated?

A

Puncturing of pericardium with a large bore needle to relieve pressure
Needle should be kept in contact with an ECG lead as it is inserted; the live trace will jump when the needle reaches the myocardium (too far)

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7
Q

ECG findings in acute pericarditis?

A

Widespread concave ST elevation (‘saddle-shaped’)
PR segment depression
Reciprocal ST depression and PR elevation in aVR and V1

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