| Literature DB >> 35741263 |
Małgorzata Dybowska1, Monika Szturmowicz1, Katarzyna Błasińska2, Juliusz Gątarek3, Ewa Augustynowicz-Kopeć4, Renata Langfort5, Paweł Kuca6, Witold Tomkowski1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Large pericardial effusion (LPE) is associated with high mortality. In patients with cardiac tamponade or with suspected bacterial etiology of pericardial effusion, urgent pericardial decompression is necessary. AIM: The aim of the present retrospective study was to assess the short-term results of pericardial decompression combined with prolonged drainage in LPE. MATERIAL: This study included consecutive patients with LPE who had been treated with pericardial fluid drainage between 2007 and 2017 in the National Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases Research Institute.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac tamponade; large pericardial effusion; neoplastic pericardial effusion; pericardiocentesis; pericardioscopy; purulent pericardial effusion; tuberculous pericardial effusion
Year: 2022 PMID: 35741263 PMCID: PMC9221585 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12061453
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1(a) Two-dimensional echocardiography. The subcostal intermediate off-axis view shows significant circumferential pericardial effusion (arrows). (b) Chest X-ray. Significant heart silhouette enlargement due to a large pericardial effusion.
Figure 2(a,b) Chest CT with contrast enhancement shows a large pericardial effusion.
Figure 3Chest MRI. T2-weighted image, axial view (a) T1 weighted image with fat saturation and with contrast enhancement, sagittal view (b). Large pericardial effusion is seen, hyperintense on T2-weighted image (a) and hypointense on a T1-weighted image (b).
Figure 4Types of procedures used in patients with large pericardial effusion.
Etiology, hemodynamic consequences, and applied treatment modalities in 74 with large pericardial effusion.
| Type of Pericarditis | Neo | Non-NPE | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Other | Purulent | TBC | ||
| Cardiac tamponade | 17 (68 %) | 7 (16%) | 2 (50%) | 0 |
| Pericardiocentesis | 14 (56%) | 4 (9%) | 0 | 0 |
| Surgical treatment | 11 (44%) | 40 (90%) | 4 (100%) | 1 |
| Intrapericardial treatment | Cisplatin | 0 | r-tPA4 (100%) | 0 |
| Total amount of drained fluid during the intervention mL | 837 mL | 775 mL | 900 mL | 750 mL |
| Median volume after intervention mL | 650 mL | 370 mL | 2135 mL | 650 mL |
| Systemic treatment with colchicine | 4 (16%) | 14 (32%) | ||
| Systemic treatment with prednisone | 4 (16%) | 10 (23%) | ||
| Systemic treatment with NSAIDs | 0 | 8 (18%) | ||
Rate of complications in the group of patients treated with surgical intervention compared to pericardiocentesis.
| Pericardiotomy/Pericardioscopy | Pericardiocentesis | |
|---|---|---|
| Paroxysmal AF | 7 (12%) | 0 |
| SVT | 1 (2%) | 0 |
| Respiratory failure requiring ventilation support | 2 (3%) | 0 |
| Clinically relevant bleeding | 1 (2%) | 0 |
| Pneumothorax | 1 (2%) | 0 |
| Infective complications | 5 (9%) | 2 (11%) |
| Total | 17 (30 %) | 2 (11%) |