Constrictive Pericarditis Flashcards

1
Q

Constrictive pericarditis presentation

A

This man has had previous mantle radiotherapy for lymphoma and has a chronic history of leg oedema, bloating and weight gain.

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2
Q

Clinical signs of Constrictive pericarditis

A

Predominantly right‐side heart failure
1. Raised JVP
⚬⚬ Dominant, brief y‐descent due to rapid early ventricular filling and rise in diastolic pressure
⚬⚬ Kussmaul’s sign: paradoxical increase in JVP on inspiration (may need to sit the patient at 90° rather than 45° to observe the JVP meniscus)
2. Pulsus paradoxus:
⚬⚬ >10 mm Hg drop in systolic pressure in inspiration (not a true paradox as it normally decreases by 2–3 mmHg!)
3. Auscultation:
⚬⚬ Pericardial knock – it’s not a knock but a high‐pitched snap (audible, early S3 due to rapid ventricular filling into a stiff pericardial sac)
4. Ascites, hepatomegaly (congestion) and bilateral peripheral oedema

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3
Q

Causes of Constrictive pericarditis

A
  1. TB: cervical lymphadenopathy
  2. Trauma (or surgery): sternotomy scar, post‐MI
  3. Tumour, Therapy (radio): radiotherapy tattoos, thoracotomy scar
  4. Connective Tissue disease: rheumatoid hands, SLE signs.
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4
Q

Investigation for Constrictive pericarditis

A
  1. CXR: pericardial calcification, old TB, sternotomy wires
  2. Echo: high acoustic signal from pericardium, septal bounce, reduced mitral flow velocity during inspiration
  3. Catheter laboratory:
    ⚬⚬ Dip and plateau of the diastolic wave form: square‐root sign.
    ⚬⚬ Equalization of LV and RV diastolic pressures
  4. CT: thickened pericardium.
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5
Q

Pathophysiology of Constrictive pericarditis

A

Thickened, fibrous capsule
- Reduces ventricular filling and
- ‘insulates’ the heart from intrathoracic pressure changes during respiration
leading to ventricular interdependence – filling of one ventricle reduces the size and filling of the other.

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6
Q

Treatment of Constrictive pericarditis

A
  1. Medical: diuretics and fluid restriction
  2. Surgical: pericardial stripping
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7
Q

Differentiating pericardial constriction from restrictive cardiomyopathy

A

It is difficult to differentiate pericardial constriction from restrictive cardiomyopathy but observing ventricular interdependence (fluctuating LV/RV pressure or MV/TV flow velocities during respiration) is highly diagnostic for constriction!

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8
Q

Jugular venous pressure waves

A

a-wave: atrial systole
c-wave: closure of tricuspid valve
x-descent: movement of atrioventricular ring during ventricular systole
v-wave: filling of the atrium
y-descent: opening of the tricuspid valve

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