Constrictive Pericarditis Flashcards

1
Q

What causes constrictive pericarditis?

A

Often Unknown, TB elsewhere, chronic pericarditis, fungal/parasitic infection

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2
Q

What are the main signs on examination?

A

Raised JVP, symptoms of right HF (fatigue, ascites, leg swelling), kussmauls sign (JVP rises paradoxically with inspiration), diffuse apex beat, s3, quiet HS’s, hepatosplenomegaly, ascites

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3
Q

What investigations should be done?

A

CXR, echo

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4
Q

What might CXR reveal?

A

Small heart +/- calcified heart

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5
Q

What is the management?

A

Surgical excision of the pericardium (pericardial stripping)

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6
Q

Explain kussmauls sign pathophysiology?

A

The fibrotic pericardium prevents blood from expanding the heart. When a person inspires the reduction in thoracic pressure should allow the heart to fill more and increase venous drainage but in ConPeri this isn’t translated so there is a reduction in emptying resulting in paradoxical rise in JVP on inspiration

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7
Q

Prognosis?

A

Extremely poor, pericardial stripping itself carries a 6% or greater mortality rate with many developing HF post op highlighting the importance of the pericardium

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8
Q

What is constrictive pericarditis?

A

Where the heart is encased in a rigid pericardium

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