Pericardial Disease
What is pericardial disease?
The stretchable, flexible two layered sac the
surrounds the heart is called the pericardium.
Learn all about diseases of this sac!
The stretchable, flexible two layered sac the
surrounds the heart is called the pericardium.
This sac holds just enough of a lubricating
fluid between the two layers to allow them to
slide over one another with ease. The
pericardium sac is what holds the heart in
place. It also prevents the heart from over
filling with blood and protects it from chest
infections. Even so, the pericardium sac is not
essential to life since when removed there is no
notable difference in the way the heart
performs.
There have been rare cases where the pericardium
was missing at birth or had weakened spots or
holes. In this situation there is danger that a
major blood vessel might herniate or bulge
through a hole and become trapped causing death
within minutes. Due to this these defects are
usually repaired or when repairs are not
possible the pericardium is completely removed.
In most cases, aside from birth defects,
pericardial disease has been known to develope
from injuries, infections and wide spread
tumors. With acute pericarditis there are many
causes ranging from viral infections, life
threatening cancer, AIDS, heart attack, heart
surgery, kidney failure, injury, radiation
treatments, systemic lupus erythematosus and
leakage of blood from an aortic aneurysm. This
disease can also result as a side effect of
anticoagulants, procainamide, phenytoin,
phenylbutazone and penicillin.
Symptoms of acute pericarditis may include chest
pain which extends to the shoulder and down the
left arm and fever. The pain with this disease
is similar to that of a heart attack with the
exception that it is worse when the patient is
lying down, coughing or breathing deeply. Acute
pericarditis has been known to cause a
potentially fatal condition known as cardiac
tamponade which is most often a result of
tumors, injury, surgery, kidney failure and
viral or bacterial infections. This condition is
considered a medical emergency and doctors will
treat it by surgically draining or puncturing
the pericardium with a long needle to remove
fluids and relieve the pressure. A local
anesthetic is used to prevent the patient from
feeling pain as the needle goes through the
chest wall. The fluid removal is monitored by
using an echocardiography. When the pericarditis
is caused by an unknown origin, doctors may
drain the fluid surgically, retaining a specimen
of the fluid to help with the diagnosis of the
cause.
In most cases acute pericarditis can be diagnosed by a doctor
by listening to the patient's chest with a
stethoscope and the patients description of the
pain. The doctor may take a chest x-ray and
echocardiography to check the levels of fluid in
the pericardium. In some cases the
echocardiography may reveal the cause and show
how much pressure the pericardial fluid is
putting
On the right chamber of the heart. Blood test may be taken to
detect some conditions such as infections,
rheumatic fever, AIDS, leukemia or kidney
failure. In most cases the prognosis will depend
on the cause. When the cause is not apparent or
viral recovery can take up to three weeks. With
some diseases such as cancer the patient will
rarely survive over 18 months. In all cases the
patient will be hospitalized and given drugs to
reduce inflammation and pain.