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Pericarditis
Essentials
- Pericarditis is a common cause of chest pain in patients presenting out of office hours.
- Hospitalisation is usually indicated in the presence of
- fever
- low blood pressure and high heart rate
- elevated venous pressure
- a large pericardial effusion
- immunosuppression.
- Most cases of pericarditis may be managed at home.
- Echocardiography will assist diagnosis and management planning.
- First-line pharmaceutical treatment usually consists of an NSAID and colchicine.
- Frequent recurrences of acute pericarditis are possible, in which case the management usually involves colchicine for six months.
Aetiology
- Infection (viral, bacterial or fungal)
- Active connective tissue disorder (rheumatoid arthritis, SLE, systemic scleroderma)
- Malignancy (usually associated with metastasis)
- Severe renal failure (uraemia)
- Pericardial injury
- Post-myocardial infarction (Dressler's syndrome)
- Post-pericardiotomy
- Cardiac trauma
- Following a cardiac procedure
- Angioplasty
- Insertion of a pacemaker
- Ablation therapy for arrhythmia
- Drug reaction (certain antimicrobials, cytotoxic drugs)
- Sequela of radiotherapy targeting the chest and cardiac region
- Idiopathic (the most common cause)
Signs and symptoms
- Chest pain is the most common symptom of acute pericarditis.
- The pain is sharp and stabbing and does not usually radiate.
- A pericardial friction rub can be heard in the early phase and is usually position dependent.
- The friction rub is usually biphasic, systolic-diastolic, often only audible during the inspiratory phase of respiration and may sound similar to rubbing sandpaper together.
- The rub may be absent in the presence of a large pericardial effusion.
- Filled jugular veins, increased jugular venous pressure
- Symptoms associated with an infection
Investigations
- Chest x-ray
- Often normal
- The heart silhouette may appear enlarged if pericardial effusion is large.
- Changes in the lung parenchyma are possible in infections.
- ECG
- Phasically alteringST-T changes resulting from myocarditis
- Low-voltage if a large accumulation of pericardial fluid is present
- Tachycardia
- Laboratory tests
- CRP elevated in > 80% of patients
- Mild or moderate leukocytosis, elevated SR
- The concentration of troponin (TnT, Tnl) increases if pericarditis is accompanied by myocarditis (myopericarditis).
- Echocardiography http://www.dynamed.com/condition/pericardial-effusion-and-tamponade#ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY
- The key investigation
- Pericardial effusion
- An abnormal finding is defined as a fluid depth > 5 mm during a diastole.
- A moderate effusion is defined as a fluid depth of 10-20 mm.
- A large effusion is defined as a fluid depth > 20 mm.
Differential diagnosis
- Myocardial infarction must be borne in mind as a possible alternative diagnosis.
- The severe pain of pericarditis may resemble that of myocardial infarction.
- However, the ECG changes are more diffuse and disproportionate to the clinical symptoms.
- ST changes are seen in several leads.
- T wave changes are common.
- A patient with pericarditis usually presents with generalised symptoms of an infection.
Treatment
- An NSAID and colchicine
- An NSAID for 2-4 weeks followed by gradual tapering of the dose as symptoms allow
- Colchicine for 6 months followed by gradual tapering of the dose if symptoms allow
- 0.5 mg twice daily when weight is > 70 kg
- 0.5 mg once daily when weight is HASH(0x2fd8d10) 70 kg or the patient has renal failure (GFR 30-60; calculator Gfr Calculator)
- Prednisone 0.2-0.5 mg/kg
- Increases the risk of recurrence.
- The tapering of the prednisone medication is often problematic.
- Should a combination of an NSAID + colchicine prove to be inefficient, glucocorticoid therapy may justifiably be considered; prednisone for 2-4 weeks followed by gradual tapering of the dose.
References
- Imazio M, Adler Y. Management of pericardial effusion. Eur Heart J 2013;34(16):1186-97. [PubMed]
- Lilly LS. Treatment of acute and recurrent idiopathic pericarditis. Circulation 2013;127(16):1723-6. [PubMed]
- Adler Y, Charron P, Imazio M et al. 2015 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of pericardial diseases: The Task Force for the Diagnosis and Management of Pericardial Diseases of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC)Endorsed by: The European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (EACTS). Eur Heart J 2015;36(42):2921-64. [PubMed]