Cardiac > Adultdz > Pericarditis

Constrictive Pericarditis:

Clinical:

Acute pericarditis is usually idiopathic (80-85% of cases) and these care are generallly presumed to be viral in origin- typically coxsackie, parvovirus B19, herpes virus 6, echovirus, and HIV [4,5]. Less common causes include uremia, certain drugs (hydralazine, procainamide), hypothyroidism, TB, autoimmune disease, and neoplastic pericardial infiltration [4,5]. It can also be seen in about 10% of patients following transmural myocardial infarction (this is called Dressler syndrome when the onset is delayed and it is related to an autoimmune origin) [4,5]. Iatrogenic causes include post radiation therapy for breast cancer or mediastinal tumors, follwoing cardiac surgery or percutaneous interventions, pacemaker insertions, or catheter ablations [5]. Acute pericarditis is often accompanied by some degree of myocarditis (myopericarditis) [5].

With acute pericarditis there is usually only minimal pericardial thickening [4]. Late gadolinium enhancement may be seen and characteristically localizes along the pericardium or epicardial layer [4]. A pericardial effusion, if present, is usually small [4]. Most cases of acute pericarditis are benign and most patients respond favorably to treatment with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs [5]. The condition may progress to chronic sclerosing pericarditis which is characterized by fibroblasts and collagen deposition that leads to a stiff pericardium (constrictive pericarditis) [5]. The risk of constrictive pericarditis after acute pericarditis is very low in viral or idiopathic pericarditis (less than 0.5%), but is relatively frequent in purulent and tuberculous pericarditis [5]. Post radiation and post operative constrictive pericarditis have become some of the most frequent causes of the disorder [5].

Constrictive pericarditis results in impaired diastolic filling of the heart due to fibrosis and thickening of the pericardium- pressures between the atria and ventricles equilibrate. Patients present with symptoms similar to those of CHF- dyspnea, leg swelling, pedal edema, hepatomegaly, and jugular venous distention. An associated finding on physical exam is "Kussmaul's sign"- a paradoxical elevation of jugular venous pressure that occurs during inspiration.

Prior to antibiotics, TB was the most common cause of constrictive pericarditis. Tuberculous pericarditis occurs in 1% of cases of TB [2]. The pericardial involvement is typically due to extranodal extension of lymphadenitis [2]. A constrictive pericarditis occurs in about 10% of patients with tuberculous pericarditis [2]. Presently, an antecedent clinically inapparent viral pericarditis is probably the most common etiology for constrictive pericarditis. Other causes include prior mediastinal XRT, cardiac surgery (0.2% of post-sternotomy patients), uremia, rheumatic fever, and collagen vascular disease. About 50% of patients demonstrate pericardial calcification, especially if the pericarditis was the result of a viral (Coxsackievirus) or Tuberculosis infection.

Clinically, it is important to distinguish constrictive pericarditis from restrictive cardiomyopathy- each of which have similar clinical presentations and hemodynamic alterations at catheterization. Pericardial stripping (pericardiectomy) may result in a dramatic improvement in symptomatology. Long term survival after pericardiectomy is related to the underlying cause of the condition and survival in post radiaiton constrictive pericarditis, survival is poor [5].

X-ray:

Both CT and MR effectively demonstrate pericardial thickening. On CT, the normal pericardium measures between 1-2 mm, and a pericardial thickness of more than 4 mm is generally regarded as abnormal, and more than 5-6 mm is highly specific for constriction [5]. However, normal pericardial thickness (2 mm or less) can be seen in 14-20% of patients with constrictive pericarditis (and this may indicate later stage disease) [5,6]. Also- up to 25% of patients without constriction can have a pericardial thickness of  4mm or more [6]. In patients with pericardial constriction, the IVC will enlarge [6]. An IVC cross-sectional area ≥ 7.5 cm2 and an IVC-to-aortic area ratio ≥ 1.6 (sensitivity 95%, specificity 76%) can aid in the identification/confirmation of pericardial constriction [6]. The phase of the respiratory cycle affects the size of the IVC [6]. A dilated IVC with absence of collapse by more than 50% in inspiration is considered a marker of increased RA pressures [6]. Because CT imaging is performed at end-inspiration, IVC measurements are a representation of RA pressures [6].

Pericardial calcifications are another important sign of constrictive pericarditis (although pericardial calcificaiton is less common than in the past and is now seen in 27-28% of patients) [5]. Diffuse enhancement of the pericardium can also be seen on post contrast imaging [5]. Pericardial calcification is best appreciated on CT, but MR can provide more hemodynamic information. Pericardial calcification can be shaggy (more common and typically within the atrioventricular groove) or egg-shell (less common- spares portions of the left atrium not covered by pericardium).

On MR, the normal pericardium appears as a curvilinear line of low signal intensity situated between the high signal intensity of the pericardial and epicardial fat. It normally measures 1 to 2 mm in thickness [5] - a width of up to 4 mm is not necessarily pathologic [3]. Small quantities of pericardial fluid may be seen normally in the superior pericardial recess (posterior to the ascending aorta). A pericardial thickness of greater than 4 mm is considered evidence of constrictive pericarditis in the appropriate clinical setting. Caution must be exercised in patients with a history of cardiac surgery or post-pericardiotomy syndrome as they may have significant pericardial thickening in the absence of clinical symptoms. Unfortunately, the absence of pericardial thickening does not exclude constrictive pericarditis [4]. Cine MR can be used to evaluate for constrictive pericarditis in cases of normal myocardial wall thickness [5]. Findings include narrow tubular shaped ventricles, a sigmoid shaped septum, dilatation of the right atrium, SVC, IVC, and hepatic veins, and abnormal ventricular movement against the pericardium. Phase contrast MR imaging of the tricuspid valve inflow will show a restricitve filling pattern of enhanced early filling and decreased or absent late filling, depending on the degree of pericardial constriction and increased filling pressures [5]. Also- flow in the IVC shows restrictive physiology with diminished or absent forward, or even reverse, systolic flow, increased early diastolic forward flow, and late reversed flow [5]. Constrictive pericarditis, in contrast to restrictive cardiomyopathy, is typically characterized by a strong respiratory-related variation in cardiac filling (ie: enhanced RV filling on inspiration and enhanced LV filling on expiration [5].

REFERENCES:

(1) Magn Reson Imaging Clin N Am 1996; May 4(2): 237-251

(2) Radiographics 2001; Kim HY, et al. Thoracic sequelae and complications of tuberculosis. 21: 839-860

(3) AJR 2002; Kovanlikaya A, et al. Characterizing chronic pericarditis using steady-state free-precession cine MR imaging. 179: 475-476

(4) AJR 2011; Hoey ETD, et al. Cardiovascular MRI for assessment of infectious and inflammatory conditions of the heart. 197: 103-112

(5) Radiology 2013; Bogaert J, Francone M. Pericardial disease: value of CT and MR imaging. 267: 340-356

(6) J Cardiovasc Comput Tomogr 2014; Hammeman K, et al. Cardiovascular CT in the diagnosis of pericardial constriction: predictive value of inferior vena cava cross-sectional area. 8: 149-157

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