Pericarditis Flashcards

1
Q

Definition

A

Inflammation of pericardium +/- effusion (typically acute - can be chronic )

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2
Q

Typical patient?

A

Male 20-50

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3
Q

Causes?

A

Idiopathic (mostly)
Infections = viral (coxsackie B virus)
Bacteria (TB - strep pneumoniae, staph aureus)
Fungal - rare - histoplasmosis, immunocompromised patient

Non infectious
Dressler’s syndrome- post MI
Autoimmune- SLE, Sjorgen’s, RA (common)
Neoplastic (lung, breast)

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4
Q

Pathology of pericarditis

A

Inflamed pericardial layers rub against each other (as narrowed pericardial space narrowed with inflammation)& exacerbate further inflammation

This may remain dry (no extra fluid; not as bad, don’t end to compensate for friction) or become effusive (extra fluid needed to compensate for friction )

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5
Q

Signs and symptoms of pericarditis

A

Severe sharp chest pain radiating to left shoulder tip (trapezius ridge - phrenic) / neck, shoulders, back
Worse lying flat or taking a deep breath
Relieved by sitting up & leaning forwards

Pericardial friction rub in auscultation- heard when patient leans forwards, squeaky leather to and fro sound

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6
Q

What is constructive pericarditis? (Chronic)

A

Visceral pericardium becomes more fibrous (granulation tissue formation) - becomes more stiff, impairs diastolic filling - late complication of acute pericarditis + sign of poor heart prognosis

Harder for hearts to fill with blood = low CO = heart failure (RHS) - increased pulmonary BP Fluid in lungs, increased blood in venous circulation

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7
Q

Diagnosis of pericarditis

A

ECG (diagnostic) = widespread saddle shaped ST elevation, PR depression
Chest x ray = may show ‘water bottle’ heart (cardiomegaly) or pneumonia commonly seen (bacterial pericarditis - TB)

High ESR = seen in autoimmune
High WCC (white cell count) = in infection

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8
Q

What is the most key rule out disease?

A

MI
Central crushing chest pain not related to lying down, no pericardial rub

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9
Q

Treatment for idiopathic or viral cause

A

NSAIDS eg. Aspirin for 2 weeks
Colchicine (anti inflammatory) for 2 weeks

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10
Q

Treatment for bacterial

A

Antibiotics if bacterial (RIPE for TB)

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11
Q

Complications?

A

Pericardial effusion = cardiac tamponade, myocarditis, constrictive pericarditis

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