Constrictive Pericarditis Flashcards

1
Q

Define constrictive pericarditis.

A

Chronic inflammation of the pericardium with thickening and scarring.

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2
Q

How common is constrictive pericarditis?

A

Incidence is decreasing as with many conditions that have an infectious component

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3
Q

Summarise the pathophysiology of constrictive pericarditis.

A

The pericardium is the sac that encloses the heart. It becomes inflamed in constrictive pericarditis.

There are 2 layers of pericardium (visceral and parietal). These 2 layers are normally distensible with a small space between them containing fluid. However, in constrictive pericarditis they become inflamed and they fuse.

Basically it acts as if there was a box around the heart.

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4
Q

What are the most common causes of constrictive pericarditis?

A

ANY CAUSE OF PERICARDITIS ESPECIALLY TB

  • 90% idiopathic or viral e.g., Coxsackie virus A9 or B1-4, Echo 8, mumps, EBV, cytomegalovirus, varicella, rubella, HIV, Parvo-19
  • TB, bacterial (include staph and pseudomonas)

Other causes:

  • Cardiac surgery and radiation
  • Incomplete drainage of purulent pericarditis
  • Post-MI
  • In association with pulmonary asbestos
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5
Q

What are the clinical features of constrictive pericarditis?

A
  • RHF symptoms (dyspnoea, ↑ JVP, fluid congestion, ascites, hepatomegaly, oedema)
  • Kussmaul’s sign positive
  • JVP has prominent X and Y descent
  • Pericardial knock - loud S3
  • Fatigue
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6
Q

What investigations would you do for constrictive pericarditis?

A

Investigations:

  • CXR: pericardial calcification
  • ECHO: ↑ pericardial thickness - helps distinguish restrictive cardiomyopathy
  • Cardiac CT/MRI - done before surgical management.
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7
Q

What is the main differential for constrictive pericarditis?

A

Restrictive cardiomyopathy

Other pericardial compressive syndromes = cardiac tamponade, effusion-constrictive pericarditis.

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8
Q

What is seen on echo in constrictive pericarditis?

A
  • Increased pericardial thickness
  • Abnormal septal ‘bounce’
  • Ventricular and valve flow abnormalities
  • Bi-atrial enlargement
  • Dilated inferior vena cava and hepatic veins
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9
Q

What is the management of constrictive pericarditis?

A

Early disease - MEDICAL → NSAIDs + colchicine trial for 2-3months then reassess; corticosteroids/immune modulation for 2-3 months then reassess.

Late disease i.e. calcification, AF, cachexia - SURGICAL - refer to cardiothoracics for pericardiectomy [or medical e.g. diuretics if not suitable candidates for surgery]

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10
Q

What are the complications of constrictive pericarditis and its management?

A
  • Anasarca (swelling of whole body)
  • AF
  • Hepatic dysfunction
  • Pleural effusion
  • Ascites
  • Pericardiectomy has 4-8% mortality
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11
Q

What is Kussmaul’s sign?

A

JVP rising on inspiration - this occurs in constrictive pericarditis

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12
Q

What are the differences between cardiac tamponade and constrictive pericarditis on examination?

A
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13
Q

Define pulsus paradoxus.

A

an abnormally large decrease in stroke volume, systolic blood pressure and pulse wave amplitude during inspiration. The normal fall in pressure is less than 10 mmHg.

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