Pericardial Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What are 3 congenital disorders associated with the pericardium?

A
  1. peritoneopericardial diaphragmatic hernia
  2. pericardial cyst (rare, not reported in cats)
  3. pericardial defects (rare, not reported in cats)
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2
Q

What are the clinical signs of PPDH?

A
  • about 50% = asymptomatic/ incidental
  • c/s = respiratory or GI, such as dyspnea, respiratory distress, vomiting, anorexia
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3
Q

What is PPDH?

A

Peritoneopercardial diaphragmatic hernia
- the pericardium fails to develop properly at the ventral edge, resulting in abdominal organs (ex. liver & gallbladder most commonly) herniating

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4
Q

How is PPDH diagnosed>?

A
  • On PE: muffled heart/lung sounds, thin, tachypnea, sternum malformation
  • On CXR: gas opacity/ bowel loops in chest, cranial shift of gastric axis, increased size of heart silhouette and loss of distinction between heart and diaphragm
  • Echo = confirmatory
    ddx = consolidation (hepatization) of the accessory lung lobe
  • increased ALT in dogs, increased Ca2+ in cats
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5
Q

How is PPDH treated?

A

surgery

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6
Q

What are some ddx for pericardial defects?

A

can look like a right or left auricle bulge on CXR
ddx: neoplasia, AV disease leading to secondary dilation

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7
Q

What are 2 acquired pericardial diseases?

A
  1. pericardial effusion
  2. restrictive pericarditis
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8
Q

What’s the most common pericardial disease in dogs and cats?

A

pericardial effusion

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9
Q

What’s cardiac tamponade?

A

impaired ventricular filling due to increased pericardial pressure, leading to a decreased stroke volume and cardiac output

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10
Q

How does acute pericardial effusion cause cardiogenic shock?

A
  • right side of the heart = more compliant = more affected by the pericardial effusion –> collapse of the R side of the heart
  • decreased R diastolic filling –> decreased L ventricular filling –> decreased cardiac output –> cardiogenic shock
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11
Q

What are the systemic signs related to chronic pericardial effusion?

A

right sided congestive heart failure predominates
- atrial natriuretic peptide is not activated in cardiac tamponade –> limit natriuresis, sustains volume overload and increased venous pressure

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12
Q

What’s the pathophysiology of pulsus paradoxus?

A
  • it’s an exaggerated change in left ventricular stroke volume
  • upon inspiration, there is increased in intrathoracic pressure – the blood will flow to lower pressure area such as the cava, pulmonary vein, R atrium & ventricle
  • this will decrease the L sided filling, thus a reduction in stroke volume
  • with pericardial effusion, the outward expansion of the ventricle is limited –> ventricular interdependence
  • the septum will bow towards the L during the R sided filling, further decreasing the L ventricular filling volume and thus stroke volume
  • this plus the normal decrease in L ventricular stroke volume with inspiration = pulsus paradoxus
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13
Q

What’s the most common cause of pericardial effusion in the dog?

A

neoplasia
followed by idiopathic
other uncommon causes = infectious, cardiovascular, metabolic and toxic (rare)

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14
Q

What are the hallmark physical abnormalities associated with acute cardiac tamponade?

A
  • pale MM
  • tachypnea
  • weak pulse
  • muffle heart sound
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15
Q

What are the typical signs of chronic cardiac tamponade?

A
  • distended jugular vein/ pulsation
  • positive hepatojugular reflux test
  • hepatomegaly
  • ascites
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16
Q

Which imaging modality can provide definitive diagnosis for pericardial effusion?

A

Echo –> cannot ddx between idiopathic and mesothelioma
- CXR may not see the classic signs unless it’s chronic

17
Q

What are some possible neoplasia associated with the heart?

A

Right atrium/ auricle: hemangiosarcoma
Heart base: neuroendocrine (chemodectoma), thyroid carcinoma, mesothelioma
- lymphoma, sarcoma, etc also possible

18
Q

How is pericardial effusion treated?

A

Acute/ cardiogenic shock: pericardiocentesis, aggressive fluid therapy
Chronic cardiac tamponade: echo then do centesis
For idiopathic: subtotal pericardectomy
Hear base mass: partial pericardectomy
Infective pericarditis: subtotal pericardectomy, post-op chest tube, long term (min 6m) antibiotics

19
Q

What’s constrictive pericarditis?

A

it’s when either (or both) the parietal or the visceral pericardium develops fibrosis without sticking to each other.

20
Q

Can effusion be present with constrictive pericarditis?

A

Yes, sometimes there is a small volume of pericardial effusion - constrictive-effusive pericarditis

21
Q

What are some clinical signs associated with constrictive pericarditis?

A
  • ascites = consistent feature
  • jugular distension = common
  • pulsus paradoxus = uncommon
22
Q

What are some causes of constrictive pericarditis?

A
  • previous pericardial effusion
    - infectious pericardial effusion (ex. C immitis) or idiopathic
  • intrapericardial foreign body
  • osseous metaplasia
  • idiopathic
23
Q

How is constrictive pericarditis diagnosed?

A

R heart catheterization –> looking at the filling pressure “dip & plateau”
- echo is not helpful
- will see hepatic vein distension

24
Q

How is constrictive pericarditis treated?

A

subtotal pericardiectomy and removal of constrictive pericardium
- parietal has better prognosis than visceral

25
Q

What’s the most common cause of feline pericardial effusion?

A

Pericardial effusion = most common pericardial disease in cats
- usually don’t result in cardiac tamponade
- most common cause = CHF, followed by neoplasia (rare), infective (rare)
- effusion = looks like pleural effusion, rarely hemorrhagic like dogs

26
Q

How is feline pericardial effusion treated?

A

Pericardiocentesis if echo evidence of cardiac tamponade is present