I have seen a fair few patients that I have diagnosed with pericarditis. It seems that I've probably over-diagnosed it in quite a lot of people! 5% of patients presenting to the ED with non-ischaemic chest pain have acute pericarditis - so my numbers are probably right.
The Pain
- Relieved by leaning forward
- Can radiate to the trapezius ridge as the phrenic nerve travels
Signs
- Pericardial friction rub in 85% of cases
- Rub still heard on breath holding
ECG
- Diffuse concave or saddle shaped ST changes, with ST elevation in 90% of cases, typically leads Ι, ΙΙ, V5 and V6
- Associated ST depression in aVR and V1 is seen in 64% of cases [6].
- PR depression
- Look carefuly at V6. If ST elevation to T wave height ratio is greater than 0.25, acute pericarditis is more likely than BER.
Diagnosis - needs 2/4
Characteristic chest pain
Pericardial friction rub
Suggestive ECG changes
New or worsening pericardial effusion
High Risk features
Temperature greater than 38ºC
Raised WCC
Large pericardial effusion
Cardiac tamponade
Acute trauma
Immunosuppression
Oral anticoagulants
Failure of NSAID therapy
Recurrent pericarditis
Troponin levels are elevated in 30-70% of patients with 'pericarditis'; they offer no prognostic information.
Pericardial Effusion
A true diagnosis needs relief of symptoms from pericardiocentesis.
Signs - Pulsus paradoxus is an exaggerated fall in systolic blood pressure of 10 mmHg or more during inspiration.
The Beck triad is present in only a minority of patients
References
http://sinaiem.org/cardiac-tamponade/
https://radiopaedia.org/articles/cardiac-tamponade
http://www.rcemlearning.co.uk/modules/acute-pericarditis/ http://www.rcemlearning.co.uk/references/pericarditis/
https://coreem.net/core/pericarditis/
http://www.emnote.org/emnotes/ecg-findings-of-pericarditis
Showing posts with label HAP8. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HAP8. Show all posts
Monday, 26 December 2016
Tuesday, 14 April 2015
Myocarditis
- active viral
* coxsackie virus B - enterovirus
* parasitic - Chagas' disease is the most common cause. Endemic in Central and South America
- post viral (lymphocytic - or rheumatic fever)
- hypersensitivity
- autoimmune (SLE, polymyositis, scleroderma, sarcoidosis, DM, thyrotoxicosis, IBD)
- infectious
- giant cell myocarditis
- (HIV is normally another infection rather than being causative)
- Often with a prodrome of fever, malaise and arthralgia (89%)
- 60% have a fever, 15% have palpitations
- May be with myopericarditis.
May be quite hard to differentiate from ACS, especially with troponin rises.
Signs
Fever, tachycardia, pericardial rub + signs of failure.
Investigations
Cardiac biomarkers may be elevated - but only 1/2 of patients had an elevated troponin
ECG: non-specific ST segment and T wave changes. Sinus tachycardia. ECG changes not normally in single vessel territory.
CXR: Normal, or features of cardiomegaly
Echo: Let ventricular dysfunction in 69% of patients
Treatment
Supportive - inotropes if needed
Immunosuppressive therapy has no evidence.
Prognosis
Heart failure, syncope, BBB or reduced ejection fraction on echo all are associated with poor outcome.
References
Friday, 26 September 2014
Pulmonary Embolism
PEs are the big diagnosis that we never want to miss, but we haven't yet decided the significance of all these tiny PEs we're picking up.
Statistics
PEs are very common: 60 to 70 per 100 000 population. They have an untreated mortality of about 30%, cause 15% of all postoperative deaths and are the most common cause of maternal death in the UK. 35 - 45% of thrombi are DVTs and up to 50% embolise. 65% of below knee DVTs are asymptomatic.
Pathogenesis:
Virchow's Triad:
Stasis: Immobility, surgery, casts
Vessel wall injury: trauma, sepsis, IVDA
Hyper-coaguable state: Primary Antithrombin and heparin cofactor II deficiencies
Protein C and S deficiencies
Factor V Leiden
Disorders of the fibrinolytic system
Lupus
Anticardiolipin antibodies
Prothrombin gene variant
Secondary Dehydration
Pregnancy
OCP
Malignancy
HONK
Risk Factors
* Major risk factors (relative risk increased 5-20-fold) include:
- Surgery - major and/or abdominal surgery
- Lower limb orthopaedic surgery, fracture or varicose veins.
- Obstetrics - late pregnancy (higher incidence with multiple births), caesarian section, pre-eclampsia
- Malignancy - pelvic, abdominal, metastatic (occult in 7 - 12% of patients)
- Previous proved VTE
- Reduced mobility - any major illness with prolonged bed rest.
* Minor risk factors (relative risk increased 2-4-fold) include:
- Cardiovascular - congenital heart disease, congestive cardiac failure, hypertension, central venous access
- Oestrogens - OCP (especially "third generation" pills), HRT (risk greatest in first year)
- Miscellaneous - occult malignancy, neurological disability, obesity, thrombotic and myeloproliferative disorders, nephrotic syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease.
* Inherited thrombophilias - need to interact with an additional risk factor to cause venous thromboembolism.
Clinical Signs & Symptoms
- Circulatory collapse in a previously well patient - happens in 5%.
Massive PE causes RHF.
Tachycardia in 30%.
- Pulmonary infarction syndrome (60%) -
pleuritic pain, with or without haemoptysis. Pleural rub.
- Isolated dyspnoea (25% - 73%) - sudden onset SOB
- Collapse, poor reserve (10%) -
In elderly patient with limited cardiorespiratory reserve. Small PE can be catastrophic.
- New onset AF and chest wall pain
- Prominent JVP “a” waves
- Right heart failure
- Pulmonary area murmur
May be completely normal, but tachycardia (classically with a loud P2 and splitting of the second heart sound) with tachypnoea are common
- Signs of a deep vein thrombosis are present in about 25%
Pregnancy
The diagnosis can be difficult to make in women who are pregnant. The standard pre-test clinical probability score should be used, recognising that pregnancy is a major risk factor for venous thromboembolism. The D-dimer test is of no use in this situation because it is raised (in the absence of PE) from about six weeks' gestation, until about three months post-partum.
The risk of pulmonary embolism increases throughout pregnancy, with more pulmonary emboli occurring after delivery than before. The risk of pulmonary embolism in pregnancy increases with maternal age and multiple births.
Pregnancy women normally have a mild compensated respiratory alkalosis.
Penicillins and cefalosporins safe in pregnancy. Avoid co-amox.
Pulmonary oedema higher risk in pregnant women because they have a lower serum osmotic pressure, and increased vascular permeability. Causes include pre-eclampsia, beta adrenergic agonists used to postpone premature labour, cardiac disease, amniotic fluid embolism.
Amniotic fluid embolism is typically associated with rapid changes in coagulation and evidence of DIC. PE does not cause such changes.
Investigations
* SI QIII TIII pattern - deep S wave in lead I, Q wave in III, inverted T wave in III.
20% of patients with PE.
* Chest x-ray: wedge shaped infarction or infection
regional oligaemia (Westermark sign)
pleural effusions
* ABG: Hypoxia results from reduced cardiac output and a low mixed PaO2 with ventilation/perfusion mismatching. A normal PaO2 and alveolar arterial gradient is possible in a young, healthy person.
Definitions
Massive PE: Acute PE with obstructive shock or SBP <90mmHg: at least 1 of the following:
- Sustained hypotension from PE itself (SBP < 90 mmHg for = 15 min, or requiring inotropic support)
- Pulselessness
- Persistent profound bradycardia (HR < 40 bpm with signs/symptoms of shock)
Submassive PE: Acute PE without systemic hypotension (SBP = 90 mmHg) but with either:
* RV dysfunction (of at least 1 of the following):
- RV dilation
- BNP > 90 pg/mL
- N-terminal pro-BNP > 500 pg/mL
- ECG changes: New complete or incomplete right BBB, anteroseptal ST elevation or depression, or anteroseptal T-wave inversion
• Myocardial necrosis is defined as either of the following:
- Troponin I > 0.4 ng/mL, or
- Troponin T > 0.1 ng/mL
Low Risk PE: Acute PE and the absence of the clinical markers of adverse prognosis
that define massive or sub-massive PE.
Scoring Systems
The original ‘PERC’ study excluded patients:
* patients in whom shortness of breath is not the most important, or equally most important, presenting complaint
* cancer
* thrombophilia or strong FHx
* beta blockers that may mask tachycardia
* transient tachycardia
* patients with amputations
* massively obese and in whom leg swelling cannot be reliably ascertained
* baseline hypoxemia
PERC rule can’t be used on: HAD CLOTS
Hormone, Age >50, DVT/PE history, Coughing blood, Leg swelling, O2 >95%, Tachycardia 100+, Surgery/trauma <28 d
Treatment
Massive PE - Alteplase 50mg ASAP.
Anticoagulation for three or six months for a first idiopathic pulmonary embolism. A British Thoracic Society trial comparing three and six months' treatment is ongoing. Some trusts use PESI to work out whether outpatient anticoagulation is suitable.

Flight prophylaxis. Current British guidelines suggest considering aspirin or LMWH, or formal anticoagulation for those at high risk of pulmonary embolism. Limited evidence to support this. Compression stockings may be beneficial.
Differentials
Venous air emboli may cause:
Raised venous pressure
Cyanosis
Hypotension
Tachycardia
Syncope.
Treatment is by lying the patient on their right side, with head down and feet up, to allow air to collect and stay at the cardiac apex. From here it can be aspirated. This may be done by ultrasound guided needle aspiration.
Fat embolism
This occurs in association with long bone fractures, with bone marrow fat droplets released into the venous circulation at fracture. It is more common in non-immobilised fractures.
It typically presents with:
Hypoxia
Coagulopathy
Transient petechial rash on neck, axillae, and skin folds
Neurological disturbance, such as confusion.
Fat globules can be identified in the urine.
Treatment is supportive.
References
http://www.enlightenme.org/knowledge-bank/cempaedia/pulmonary-embolism
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/education/ccc/pulmonary-embolism/
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/ecg-library/pe/
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/cicm-saq-2012-2-q5/http://lifeinthefastlane.com/education/ccc/thrombolysis-submassive-pulmonary-embolus/
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/cardiovascular-curveball-011/
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/pulmonary-puzzle-016/
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/hematology-hoodwinker-001/
http://www.enlightenme.org/the-curriculum-zone/node/2091http://www.enlightenme.org/the-curriculum-zone/node/11779http://m.eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2014/09/17/eurheartj.ehu283
Statistics
PEs are very common: 60 to 70 per 100 000 population. They have an untreated mortality of about 30%, cause 15% of all postoperative deaths and are the most common cause of maternal death in the UK. 35 - 45% of thrombi are DVTs and up to 50% embolise. 65% of below knee DVTs are asymptomatic.
Pathogenesis:
Virchow's Triad:
Stasis: Immobility, surgery, casts
Vessel wall injury: trauma, sepsis, IVDA
Hyper-coaguable state: Primary Antithrombin and heparin cofactor II deficiencies
Protein C and S deficiencies
Factor V Leiden
Disorders of the fibrinolytic system
Lupus
Anticardiolipin antibodies
Prothrombin gene variant
Secondary Dehydration
Pregnancy
OCP
Malignancy
HONK
Risk Factors
* Major risk factors (relative risk increased 5-20-fold) include:
- Surgery - major and/or abdominal surgery
- Lower limb orthopaedic surgery, fracture or varicose veins.
- Obstetrics - late pregnancy (higher incidence with multiple births), caesarian section, pre-eclampsia
- Malignancy - pelvic, abdominal, metastatic (occult in 7 - 12% of patients)
- Previous proved VTE
- Reduced mobility - any major illness with prolonged bed rest.
* Minor risk factors (relative risk increased 2-4-fold) include:
- Cardiovascular - congenital heart disease, congestive cardiac failure, hypertension, central venous access
- Oestrogens - OCP (especially "third generation" pills), HRT (risk greatest in first year)
- Miscellaneous - occult malignancy, neurological disability, obesity, thrombotic and myeloproliferative disorders, nephrotic syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease.
* Inherited thrombophilias - need to interact with an additional risk factor to cause venous thromboembolism.
Clinical Signs & Symptoms
Massive PE causes RHF.
Tachycardia in 30%.
- Pulmonary infarction syndrome (60%) -
pleuritic pain, with or without haemoptysis. Pleural rub.
- Isolated dyspnoea (25% - 73%) - sudden onset SOB
- Collapse, poor reserve (10%) -
In elderly patient with limited cardiorespiratory reserve. Small PE can be catastrophic.
- New onset AF and chest wall pain
- Prominent JVP “a” waves
- Right heart failure
- Pulmonary area murmur
May be completely normal, but tachycardia (classically with a loud P2 and splitting of the second heart sound) with tachypnoea are common
- Signs of a deep vein thrombosis are present in about 25%
Pregnancy
The diagnosis can be difficult to make in women who are pregnant. The standard pre-test clinical probability score should be used, recognising that pregnancy is a major risk factor for venous thromboembolism. The D-dimer test is of no use in this situation because it is raised (in the absence of PE) from about six weeks' gestation, until about three months post-partum.
The risk of pulmonary embolism increases throughout pregnancy, with more pulmonary emboli occurring after delivery than before. The risk of pulmonary embolism in pregnancy increases with maternal age and multiple births.
Pregnancy women normally have a mild compensated respiratory alkalosis.
Penicillins and cefalosporins safe in pregnancy. Avoid co-amox.
Pulmonary oedema higher risk in pregnant women because they have a lower serum osmotic pressure, and increased vascular permeability. Causes include pre-eclampsia, beta adrenergic agonists used to postpone premature labour, cardiac disease, amniotic fluid embolism.
Amniotic fluid embolism is typically associated with rapid changes in coagulation and evidence of DIC. PE does not cause such changes.
Investigations
* SI QIII TIII pattern - deep S wave in lead I, Q wave in III, inverted T wave in III.
20% of patients with PE.
* Chest x-ray: wedge shaped infarction or infection
regional oligaemia (Westermark sign)
pleural effusions
* ABG: Hypoxia results from reduced cardiac output and a low mixed PaO2 with ventilation/perfusion mismatching. A normal PaO2 and alveolar arterial gradient is possible in a young, healthy person.
Definitions
Massive PE: Acute PE with obstructive shock or SBP <90mmHg: at least 1 of the following:
- Sustained hypotension from PE itself (SBP < 90 mmHg for = 15 min, or requiring inotropic support)
- Pulselessness
- Persistent profound bradycardia (HR < 40 bpm with signs/symptoms of shock)
Submassive PE: Acute PE without systemic hypotension (SBP = 90 mmHg) but with either:
* RV dysfunction (of at least 1 of the following):
- RV dilation
- BNP > 90 pg/mL
- N-terminal pro-BNP > 500 pg/mL
- ECG changes: New complete or incomplete right BBB, anteroseptal ST elevation or depression, or anteroseptal T-wave inversion
• Myocardial necrosis is defined as either of the following:
- Troponin I > 0.4 ng/mL, or
- Troponin T > 0.1 ng/mL
Low Risk PE: Acute PE and the absence of the clinical markers of adverse prognosis
that define massive or sub-massive PE.
Scoring Systems
The original ‘PERC’ study excluded patients:
* patients in whom shortness of breath is not the most important, or equally most important, presenting complaint
* cancer
* thrombophilia or strong FHx
* beta blockers that may mask tachycardia
* transient tachycardia
* patients with amputations
* massively obese and in whom leg swelling cannot be reliably ascertained
* baseline hypoxemia
PERC rule can’t be used on: HAD CLOTS
Hormone, Age >50, DVT/PE history, Coughing blood, Leg swelling, O2 >95%, Tachycardia 100+, Surgery/trauma <28 d
Treatment
Massive PE - Alteplase 50mg ASAP.
Anticoagulation for three or six months for a first idiopathic pulmonary embolism. A British Thoracic Society trial comparing three and six months' treatment is ongoing. Some trusts use PESI to work out whether outpatient anticoagulation is suitable.
Flight prophylaxis. Current British guidelines suggest considering aspirin or LMWH, or formal anticoagulation for those at high risk of pulmonary embolism. Limited evidence to support this. Compression stockings may be beneficial.
Differentials
Venous air emboli may cause:
Raised venous pressure
Cyanosis
Hypotension
Tachycardia
Syncope.
Treatment is by lying the patient on their right side, with head down and feet up, to allow air to collect and stay at the cardiac apex. From here it can be aspirated. This may be done by ultrasound guided needle aspiration.
Fat embolism
This occurs in association with long bone fractures, with bone marrow fat droplets released into the venous circulation at fracture. It is more common in non-immobilised fractures.
It typically presents with:
Hypoxia
Coagulopathy
Transient petechial rash on neck, axillae, and skin folds
Neurological disturbance, such as confusion.
Fat globules can be identified in the urine.
Treatment is supportive.
References
http://www.enlightenme.org/knowledge-bank/cempaedia/pulmonary-embolism
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/education/ccc/pulmonary-embolism/
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/ecg-library/pe/
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/cicm-saq-2012-2-q5/http://lifeinthefastlane.com/education/ccc/thrombolysis-submassive-pulmonary-embolus/
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/cardiovascular-curveball-011/
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/pulmonary-puzzle-016/
http://lifeinthefastlane.com/hematology-hoodwinker-001/
http://www.enlightenme.org/the-curriculum-zone/node/2091http://www.enlightenme.org/the-curriculum-zone/node/11779http://m.eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2014/09/17/eurheartj.ehu283
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