Pericardial effusion and tamponade

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Background

  • Always consider in pt w/ PEA
  • Always consider in pt w/ myocardial stab wound (80% result in tamponade)
    • GSW is less likely to result in tamponade b/c pericardial defect is larger
  • Pathophysiology
    • Increased pericardial pressure > decreased RV filling > decreased CO

Etiology

  1. Hemopericardium
    1. Trauma
    2. Iatrogenic (misplaced central line)
    3. Bleeding diathesis
    4. Ventricular rupture (post-MI)
  2. Non-hemopericardium
    1. Cancer
    2. Pericarditis
    3. HIV complications (infection, Kaposi sarcoma, lymphoma)
    4. Renal failure
    5. SLE
    6. Post-radiation
    7. Myxedema

DDx

  1. Tension PTX
  2. PE
  3. Aortic dissection
  4. SVC syndrome
  5. Large pleural effusion/hemothorax
  6. Constrictive pericarditis
  7. Cardiogenic shock

Clinical Features

  • CP, SOB, fatigue
  • CHF-type appearance
  • Narrow pulse pressure
  • Friction rub
  • Beck's Triad (33% of pts)
    • Hypotension, muffled heart sounds, JVD

Diagnosis

  1. Ultrasound
    1. RV collapse, effusion
    2. 5% false negative (usually b/c pericardium is decompressing into L chest)
      1. Be suspicious if pt has a left-sided pulmonary effussion
  2. ECG
    1. Tachycardia (bradycardia is ominous finding)
    2. Normal or low voltage
    3. Electrical alternans
  3. CXR
    1. Enlarged cardiac silhouette
  4. Pulsus paradoxus
    1. >10mmHg change in sys BP on inspiration

Treatment

  • Tamponade:
    • Pericardiocentesis
    • IVF to increase RV volume
    • Meds
      • Pressors (temporizing)
      • Avoid preload reducing meds (nitrates, diuretics)
  • Effusion without tamponade:
    • Urgent dialysis for pt w/ known renal failure

Disposition

  1. Admit with cardiology/CT surgery consult

See Also

Source

Tintinalli