Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Wednesday Morning Conference December 14th 2005 Kenneth Saland M.D. FACC Case Presentation 43 y/o white man Chief complaint(s) Intermittant abdominal pain Bloating History of present illness 3 mos of abdominal pain-intermittent Bloating Loose bowel movements More recently swelling in lower extremities Weight loss of 20 lbs PMH BPH Allergy None SH No tobacco, married, 1 daughter a/w No IVDA Anabolic steroids in early 1990’s Drinks 2-3 alcoholic drinks per month Busy engineer PSH Nasal surgery Squamous ca lesion removed rt shoulder 1980 Meds None FH Both parents deceased Mother with breast CA, father had duodenal CA No cardiac history Review of Systems Wt loss, fatigue, poor appetite Dyspnea on exertion No chest pain Palpitations intermittantly Loose stools Physical Exam Bp 120/60 HR 100 regular RR-22 sat 98% RA Wt 100 kg Height 6’3” Marked JVD Clear lungs Tachycardic, regular no murmurs Abdomen Mild generalized tenderness Positive bowel sounds No hepatosplenomegaly noted Distended and edematous Extremities –trace peripheral edema Neuro-grossly normal EKG: atrial flutter with rate of 100 CXR-normal heart size, clear lung fields Labs wbc-5.7 Hgb-12 Platelets-257 Cr-1.0 Na 141 K 4.5 CO2 26 Ca 9.6 Albumin 4.2, INR 1.3 AST 16 ALT 12 AP 94 total bilirubin 0.9, total globulin 2.9 Hep A,B,C negative, negative PPD TSH 2.3 Ferritin 276 PSA 0.3 Labs Stool studies grew out dientamoeba fragilis Ultasound of abdomen—ascites Paracentesis of ascitic fluid demostrated a high SAAG of 2.2 (Serum Albumin-4.2 Ascites Albumin 2.0) Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis diagnosed with wbcs of 2,125 97% polys Ascites cytology was negative EGD, Colonscopy was planned SAAG Differential Dx Serum-to-ascites albumin gradient: Runyon et al (1992) >=1.1g/dL Cirrhosis Alcoholic Hepatitis CHF Massive hepatic metastases Vascular occlusion Fatty liver disease of pregnancy Myxedema <1.1 g/dl Peritoneal carcinomatosis Nephrotic syndrome Peritoneal TB Pancreatitis Bowel obst/per/infarct serositis Echocardiography Normal ejection fraction Mild to moderate MR LA upper limits of normal No pericardial effusion CT of chest and abdomen Ascites, prominent liver and spleen No signs of cirrhosis or liver mass Chest CT revealed pericardial calcification Pericardial calcification Right Heart Catheterization Cardiac output 5.0 liters/min RA 24/23 mmHg RV 40/25 mmHg PA 42/27 mm Hg PCW 27/25 mmHg LV/LVEDP 100/23 mmHg LV/RV simultaneous tracing reveals equilibrium of diastolic pressures Dip and plateau configuration of the ventricular waveforms One month later…. Surgical pathology of pericardium Dense fibrosis and scattered chronic inflammation Constrictive Pericarditis Heavily fibrosed or calcified pericardium restricts diastolic filling and results in elevation and equilibrium of diastolic pressures of all four chambers of the heart Usually begins with initial episode of acute pericarditis which may not be detectable clinically Initial fibrin deposition often with pericardial effusion Slowly progresses to a subacute stage Organization and resorption of effusion Chronic stage of fibrous scarring and thickening Obliteration of pericardial space-majority of cases visceral and parietal layers fuse Disease progression Increase in systemic venous pressure-initially maintains diastolic filling of the ventricles Ultimately results in renal retention of sodium and water further increasing systemic venous pressure Pericardial scar may reduce diastolic ventricular volumes Compensatory tachycardia Reduced cardiac output, tachycardia and elevated right heart pressures may simulate myocardial failure Systolic contraction of the ventricles and intrinsic contractile state of the myocardium are usually normal Severe cases-myocardial function may be depressed secondary to myocardial atrophy, fibrosis or obliteration of the epicardial coronary arteries in the fibrotic scar causing ischemia Diagnosis Symptoms of systemic venous congestion Edema, abdominal swelling, ascites, passive hepatic congestion Postprandial fullness, dyspepsia, anorexia If right and left heart pressures elevated Orthopnea, dyspnea, cough Other symptoms-fatigue,weight loss, muscle wasting Physical findings Elevated JVD Kussmaul’s sign-inspiratory increase in systemic venous pressure Pulsus paradoxus is uncommon in rigid constrictive pericarditis unless pericardial effusion is present Diastolic pericardial “knock”-early diastolic sound often heard along the left sternal border The knock represents sudden cessation of ventricular filling –higher frequency than S3 and may be confused with opening snap sound of mitral stenosis Diagnostic tools CXR-cardiac silhouette may be small, normal or enlarged Pericardial effusion-enlarged borders Calcification-helpful but does not equal percardial constriction CT/MR-can identify pericardial thickening, dilation of vena cavae and RV deformation ***Significant pericardial constriction may occur in presence of diseased but minally thickened pericardium EKG –low voltage, afib, flutter, generalized T wave changes, conduction defects…lots of stuff echocardiography Pericardial thickening Effusions/calcifications “septal bounce” –abrupt displacement of of interventricular septum during early diastolic filling Hepatic/IVC dilation Inspiratory decrease in diastolic mitral inflow and increased early diastolic tricuspid inflow(opposite changes occur with expiration) Respiratory variation in doppler flow patterns may also suggest constriction vs restriction. Cardiac Catheterization Elevation and equalization of diastolic filling pressures Catheterization of both ventricles should be performed-elevation and virtual identical (within 5mmHg) right atrial, right ventricular,left atrial, and left ventricular diastolic pressures Right and left ventricular diastolic pressures show characteristic early diastolic dip followed by a plateau Pressures in the left (LV) and right ventricle (RV) of a patient with constrictive pericarditis. During peak inspiration (arrow), there is a decrease in LV pressure and a concomitant increase in RV pressure, indicating discordance of ventricular pressures . Right atrial pressure characterized by preserved systolic x descent, a prominent early y descent . A and V waves are small and equal in height –M or W configuration Varieties of constrictive pericarditis Typical forms -chronic (calcific, rigid shell) -subacute (non-calcific, elastic) Effusive-constrictive Localised congenital Etiologies of constrictive pericarditis TB Post-surgical Prior mediastinal radiation Connective tissue disorders-RA, SLE Drug-induced-procainamide,hydralazine,methysergide Neoplastic Trauma-induced inflammation Infectious-bacterial, fungal, parasitic,viral Post MI, post-pericardiotomy syndrome Idiopathic congenital Treatment and prognosis Diet and diuretics Avoid calcium and beta blockers because mild sinus tachycardia is a compensatory mechanism Complete resection of pericardium especially at diaphragmatic ventricular contacts May have excessive bleeding, technically complex. High incidence of arrythmias Mortality rates 5-15% Most patients achieve NYHA class 1 or 2 after surgery Results are better with less calcium and when performed earlier in disease course The end!! Constrictive vs Restrictive History -active pericarditis ECG absence of intraventricular conduction defect Chest radiograph pericardial calcification CT/MRI thickened pericardium Echocardiogram septal notch Doppler ventricular interdependence Cardiac catheterization close equilibration of diastolic pressures Biopsy absence of amyloid or other infiltrative disease