Pericardium Flashcards
acute or recurrent pericarditis
workup
look for autoimmune disease
SLE, Sjögren syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, and scleroderma, systemic vasculitides, Behçet syndrome, sarcoidosis, and inflammatory bowel diseases.
ANA, TB if immunocompromised/endemic, hypothyroidism (relative brady, low voltage)
recurrent pericarditis treatment
more common if not treated with colchicine initially
colchicine 0.6mg BID (6-12 months) + (NSAID/aspirin: 2-4 week taper when asymptomatic)
pericarditis diagnosis
clinical, confirm with CRP/imaging
get CXR, ECG, echo
do not do virologic testing
pericarditis ECG
PR depression
steroids in pericarditis
for patients unable to take NSAID therapy or for those with specific indications (autoimmune disease, renal failure, pregnancy, concomitant anticoagulant therapy).
constrictive vs restrictive physiology
simultaneous LV and RV tracings
square root sign (dip and plateau in diastole due to rapid filling which is abruptly halted in constriction)
ventricular interdependence: during inspiration, right atrial pressures decrease transiently, resulting in increased venous return and RV filling and decreased LV filling, which leads to bowing of the interventricular septum towards the LV. During expiration, the reverse occurs.
restrictive physiology
ventricular concordance: simultaneous drop in both RV and LV filling during inspiration
hemodynamic tracings MS MR TR tamponade
diastolic gradient between LA and LV
tall v waves on PCWP tracing
tall v waves on RA tracing
equalization of the diastolic pressures between all four cardiac chambers due to the elevated pericardial pressures.
cardiac tamponade diagnosis
echo
clinical, Beck’s triad (hypotension, JVD, decreased heart sounds), pulsus paradoxus (>10), tachycardia on presentation
>30% variation in mitral inflow with respiration/>60% in tricuspid, and a dilated IVC, diastolic collapse of right chambers, diastolic blunting of hepatic vein forward flow,
persistent tachy: urgent pericardiocentesis
if decompensation: fluids, inotropes or vasopressor support
effusive-constrictive pericarditis
Failure of the right atrial pressure to fall by 50% or to a level <10 mm Hg after pericardiocentesis
elevated intrapericardial pressure, PCWP
constrictive pericarditis signs
echo
lower extremity edema, Kussmaul’s sign (jugular venous distension that increased with inspiration) , and a pericardial knock
annulus reversus: lateral mitral annular velocity less than the medial mitral annular velocity, prominent septal bounce, diastolic hepatic venous flow reversal increased with expiration, the E wave velocity across the mitral valve is very high (due to the high left atrial pressure), but the deceleration time is very short, the mitral inflow decrease with inspiration
pericarditis ECG
classically diffuse ST elevations and/or P-R depressions, except in aVR, where the findings are reversed
pericardial cyst treatment
do not intervene unless symptomatic
recurrent malignant pericardial effusion tx
constrictive pericarditis tx
pericardial window
pericardiectomy
most sensitive echo finding for tamponade
IVC plethora