Background
- Inflammation or infection of the pericardial sac
Microbiology
- Idiopathic (most common)
- Infectious
- Viral
- Mycobacterial: Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Bacterial
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Haemophilus influenzae
- Neisseria meningitidis
- Others: Chlamydia psittaci, Chlamydia trachomatis, Legionella, Salmonella, Borrelia burgdorferi, Mycoplasma, Actinomyces, Nocardia, Tropheryma whipplei, Treponema, Rickettsia, Listeria
- Fungal: Histoplasma (most common fungal cause), Aspergillus, Blastomyces, Coccidioides, Candida
- Parasitic: Echinococcus, Entamoeba histolytica, Toxoplasma, Schistosoma species
- Non-infectious
Clinical Manifestations
- Positional chest pain, often several weeks following viral infection (most commonly Coxsackievirus)
Prognosis and Complications
Recurrent Pericarditis
- Pericarditis recurs in 15 to 30% of patients
Constrictive Pericarditis
- Scarring a loss of elasticity of the pericardium following pericarditis
Cardiac Tamponade
- Accumulation of pericardial effusion resulting in increased intrapericarial pressure causing heart failure
Differential Diagnosis
Investigations
- Labs: lytes/creatinine (for NSAID safety), troponins
- Echocardiogram
- ECG
- Stage I: diffuse ST elevation with PR depression
- Stage II: normalization of ST and PR segments
- Stage III: diffuse deep T-wave inversions
- Stage IV: normalization of the ECG
Diagnosis
- Based on 2 of 4 features:
- Positional chest pain
- EKG abnormalities
- PR depression, then diffuse ST elevation with upsloping, then ST depression, then T-wave inversions, then T-wave normalization
- Evolves over weeks
- Echocardiography
- Rub on auscultation
Management
- Mainstay of treatment is NSAIDs for 1-2 weeks, tapered over another 2-3 weeks
- ASA 650mg po qid with pantoprazole
- Indomethacin
- Adjunctive colchicine for 3 months
- If refractory or NSAID allergy: steroids with a slow taper
- Increased recurrence rate