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1.
Candida pericarditis and tamponade developed in a patient with sterile purulent pericarditis secondary to systemic lupus erythematosus. Therapy with amphotericin B and properly timed surgical intervention led to a clinical and microbiological cure. This article emphasizes the importance of differentiating an infected pericardial effusion from the sterile pericarditis of systemic lupus erythematosus and provides suggested guidelines for the management of that complication.  相似文献   

2.
The clinical findings in five patients with purulent pneumococcal pericarditis are presented. Predisposing factors were untreated pneumococcal pneumonia and empyema in three patients and congenital hypogammaglobulinemia in one patient. The three patients, in whom the diagnosis was established by pericardiocentesis, recovered without sequelae after surgical drainage of the pericardium and systemic antibiotic therapy. The two remaining patients had unsuspected purulent pericarditis demonstrated postmortem.A review of 113 cases of purulent pneumococcal pericarditis since 1900 was made. A preceding pneumonia was present in 93.1 per cent of the patients; 66.6 per cent had pneumonia with empyema. Signs frequently associated with pericarditis such as a pericardial friction rub, pulsus paradoxus and an enlarged cardiac silhouette may be absent although circulatory embarrassment exists. Pericardiocentesis is mandatory to establish the diagnosis of purulent pneumococcal pericarditis. Although mortality in untreated patients was 100 per cent, the 10 patients treated with both systemic antibiotics and surgical drainage survived.  相似文献   

3.
Although the incidence of purulent pericarditis has decreased significantly in the modern antibiotic era, a high index of clinical suspicion should be maintained to diagnose this life-threatening illness at an early stage. Community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) is a global pathogen and notorious for its ability to cause infection in otherwise healthy individuals. However, it has been associated with purulent pericarditis only in some sporadic case reports. The authors describe a case of purulent pericardial effusion caused by CA-MRSA infection. To the best of our knowledge, this is only the fourth case of CA-MRSA pericarditis to be reported in English literature.  相似文献   

4.
The authors present two cases of purulent pericarditis secondary to pneumococcus pneumonia, a rare entity in the antibiotic era, one of them in an apparently healthy person. A systematized diagnostic approach to moderate pericardial effusion is presented, together with a review of purulent pericarditis. The presence of pericardial effusion with persistent fever with or without known etiology, particularly in the immunocompromised but also in the apparently healthy patient, should always raise the possibility of purulent pericarditis.  相似文献   

5.
Pyogenic pericarditis is encountered uncommonly in clinical practice. The majority of cases of clinically apparent pericarditis are viral in origin. When bacterial infection of the pericardial space does occur the causative organism is usually Staphylococcus or Streptococcus species. Isolation of an haemophilus organism from the pericardial space in this condition is distinctly unusual. There are only 10 previously reported cases in the literature of pericarditis secondary to Haemophilus influenzae. This report describes the case of a 36-year-old woman who presented with haemophilus empyema and purulent pericarditis progressing to cardiac tamponade. There are isolated reports of successful treatment of pyogenic pericarditis with closed drainage and antibiotics. In the absence of clear evidence demonstrating the efficacy of this approach the authors favour open exploration of the pericardial space.  相似文献   

6.
Purulent pericarditis is a localized infection with a thick, fibrinous hypercellular exudate and is historically associated with a high mortality. We describe a case of purulent pericarditis due to Streptococcus agalactiae (S. agalactiae) in a 30-year-old woman with sickle cell disease who presented with fever, dyspnea, and S. agalactiae septicemia. Despite timely initiation of antibiotics, she developed a large purulent pericardial effusion requiring surgical pericardiocentesis followed by a pericardial window. At 14?months follow-up, she has remained asymptomatic without sequelae. A review of the literature contained only four patients with purulent pericarditis in sickle cell patients. We discuss the unique aspects of this case in the context of purulent pericarditis in the age of modern antibiotics and hypothesize on the pathogenesis of delayed pericardial effusion after pericarditis.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Purulent pericarditis is very rare. However, among patients suffering from this disease the mortality rate is very high. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness and side effects of intrapericardial streptokinase administration in patients with confirmed purulent pericarditis. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Three patients, one 50-year-old man and two women aged 64 and 40 years, who were admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) due to purulent pericarditis, entered the study. In all three cases a subxiphoid pericardiotomy followed by insertion of a drainage line into the pericardial space was performed. Antibiotic therapy was started immediately on admission to the hospital. Despite continued antibiotic therapy in all three patients, daily drainage from the pericardium--during several days after surgery--staggered between 50-200 ml/day. Due to considerable purulent pericardial drainage loculations and/or fibrin deposits confirmed by echocardiography, streptokinase (500,000 IU dissolved in 50 ml of normal saline) was administered into the pericardial space over 10 min, using the previously inserted drainage catheter. This regimen was repeated after 12 and 24 h. The total dose of streptokinase was 1,500,000 IU. RESULTS: The clinical effect of intrapericardial streptokinase administration was excellent. Several days after intrapericardial administration of streptokinase, drainage of purulent pericardial fluid stopped. No complications associated with intrapericardial streptokinase administration were observed. In the follow-up echocardiography (in two patients repeated 6 and 9 months after delivery of streptokinase), pericardial fluid and echocardiographic signs of pericardial constriction were not observed. CONCLUSION: Intrapericardial administration of streptokinase in purulent pericarditis is effective and safe.  相似文献   

8.
Leukocyte imaging with indium-111 is a relatively new technique which, to this point in time, has been discussed almost exclusively in the radiologic literature. Although this procedure has been used mainly to detect intra-abdominal infection, the thorax is routinely imaged along with the abdomen, and therefore detection of cardiac disease may be feasible. This case report is of a young woman after liver transplantation who developed occult purulent pericarditis initially detected by a leukocyte scan with indium-111. This case demonstrates that striking pericardial uptake on a whole-body indium-111 leukocyte scan can occur with purulent pericarditis, and it reemphasizes how insidiously purulent pericarditis may present in an immunosuppressed patient.  相似文献   

9.
A 31-year-old woman with chronic renal insufficiency and recurrent pericarditis developed and enlarging cardiac silhouette and physical signs of cardiac tamponade. Cardiac catheterization demonstrated pericardial effusion with hemodynamic evidence of cardiac compression. At pericardial exploration, 1.5 L. of foul-smelling purulent material was removed from a distended pericardial sac. Cultures of both the exudate and pericardium revealed pure growth of Bacteroides fragiles. The patient was subsequently treated with intravenous chloramphenicol and has had an uncomplicated clinical course since that time.This represents the first reported case of cardiac tamponade secondary to culturally proved Bacteroides pericarditis in the setting of chronic renal insufficiency.  相似文献   

10.
Candidal pericarditis is extremely rare. Its clinical diagnosis and successful treatment has not been reported earlier. A case is reported of a 30-year-old male with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia complicated with exudative pleuropericarditis, probably initially of leukaemic origin. Following persisting fever cultures of blood and pericardial fluid yielded massive growth of candida albicans. After 3 weeks treatment with intravenous amphotericin B, flucytosine and miconazole, the blood and pericardial fluid was sterilized. A sufficient amphotericin B concentration in the pericardial fluid was obtained without local instillation.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVES: Large pericardial effusions and cardiac tamponade are rare in childhood.The aim of this study was to evaluate the aetiological factors and clinical findings of large pericardial effusion and cardiac tamponade in children. METHODS: We reviewed retrospectively the records of 10 (6 male, 4 female) patients (mean age: 8.05 +/- 4.4 y) with the diagnosis of large pericardial effusion and cardiac tamponade requiring pericardiocentesis and pericardial drainage between 2002 and 2004. RESULTS: After extensive diagnostic investigation we detected that three patients had tuberculosis, one patient had uraemic pericarditis; one patient had bacterial pericarditis; one patient had post-pericardiotomy syndrome; two patients had malignancy and two patients had no identifiable aetiology. Echocardiography-guided percutaneous pericardial puncture and pigtail catheter placement is safe and effective for initial treatment of patients with large pericardial effusion and cardiac tamponade and in most cases, initial assessment with clinical, serologic, and radiologic investigation and careful follow-up can reveal the aetiology. CONCLUSIONS: Although tuberculosis is rare in industrialized countries, in developing countries it remains one of the most important causes of large pericardial effusion and should be investigated and excluded in each patient.  相似文献   

12.
Pericarditis is one of the most frequent manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus; however, purulent pericarditis and tamponade are rare. We describe a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus and culture-proven gonococcal arthritis who developed purulent pericarditis with intracellular gram-negative diplococci. Evidence of tamponade was seen on echocardiography. There has not been a reported case of Neisseria gonorrhoeae in pericardial fluid or tissue since the introduction of antibiotics.  相似文献   

13.
Candida Pericarditis in a patients with leukaemia   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Candidal pericarditis is extremely rare. Its clinical diagnosis and successful treatment has not been reported earlier. A case reported of a 30-year-old male with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia complicated with exudative pleuropericarditis, probably initially of leukaemic origin. Following persisting fever cultures of blood and pericardial fluid yielded massive growth of candida albicans. After 3 weeks treatment with intravenous amphotericin B, flucytosine and miconazole, the blood and pericardial fluid was sterilized. A sufficient amphotericin B concentration in the pericardial fluid was obtained without local instillation.  相似文献   

14.
R W Snyder  T I Braun 《Chest》1999,115(6):1746-1747
Bacterial pericarditis with cardiac tamponade is a life-threatening disorder that has been associated with a variety of organisms. There is usually an associated underlying condition or a seeding of the pericardium from an infection elsewhere. We report the development of cardiac tamponade and a subsequent pericardial constriction due to group F streptococcus purulent pericarditis. We believe this to be the first report of a postpartum patient with purulent pericarditis.  相似文献   

15.
The hospital records of 20 patients admitted to Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas with pericardial effusion during the four-year period of 1966 to 1969, and who underwent pericardiocentesis and percutaneous open pericardial windows, were reviewed. The etiologies of the effusions were as follows: purulent pericarditis (5), hypertensive and ischemic heart disease with congestive heart failure (4), and chronic idiopathic effusion (4). Specific etiologic diagnoses were made from the pericardial biopsy in only two cases (10 per cent), while 13 (65 per cent) had at least one serious complication in the postoperative period with eight (40 per cent) developing secondary infection. Twenty-one patients underwent pericardiocenteses without complications and four etiologic diagnoses (20 per cent) were made. Suggestions for indications for these procedures are presented.  相似文献   

16.
R Karp  R Meldahl  R McCabe 《Chest》1992,102(3):953-954
Cures of Candida pericarditis reported in the literature uniformly involved surgical drainage of the pericardial space. We report a patient with purulent pericarditis caused by Candida albicans who was treated successfully with antifungal chemotherapy combined with a single pericardiocentesis that did not completely evacuate the pericardial space. This case indicates that thoracotomy with surgical drainage of the pericardium is not mandatory for successful therapy of Candida pericarditis.  相似文献   

17.
Diagnosis and management of acute pericardial syndromes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Essentially, acute pericardial syndromes include acute pericarditis and cardiac tamponade. This article focuses on the diagnosis and management of acute pericarditis. In Spain, most cases of acute pericarditis whose etiology is not apparent at initial clinical presentation are either idiopathic or viral pericarditis, which follow a benign or self-limiting clinical course (although tamponade may develop in some patients). Knowledge of this basic epidemiologic fact is essential for the development of a rational management protocol that, on the one hand, avoids the unnecessary use of invasive pericardial diagnostic procedures in patients with idiopathic pericarditis and that, on the other hand, correctly identifies most cases of specific pericarditis, which mainly comprise purulent, tuberculous or neoplastic pericarditis. In accordance with this rationale and on the basis of our own experience, we have proposed a protocol for the management of acute pericardial disease that differs markedly from the "Guidelines on the Diagnosis and Management of Pericardial Disease" recently produced by the European Society of Cardiology. In addition, we have made some comments on the cardiac tamponade and the acute and subacute constrictive pericarditis that can occur during the resolution of acute pericarditis.  相似文献   

18.
The value of pericardioscopy in pericardial effusion of uncertain origin was evaluated in 20 patients, aged from 18 to 77 years, whose pericardial effusion had been diagnosed by ultrasonography; 2 patients presented with clinical signs of tamponade. The cause of the pericarditis was unknown, but the clinical context suggested a malignant disease in 13 patients, tuberculosis in 5 patients and another cause in 2 patients. The pericardium was explored by means of a direct vision, cold-light endoscope, usually a mediastinoscope, introduced by the retroxiphoidal route under general of local anaesthesia. This method made it possible to study the pericardial fluid, examine the pericardial serous membrane, perform biopsies at a distance from the orifice of entry and cleanse the pericardium thoroughly in cases with blood or pus collection. Apart from 2 cases where the examination could not be completed because of an anterior mediastinal mass and a pericardial symphysis, valuable information could be obtained in purulent pericarditis (n = 1), chronic radiation induced lesions (n = 2), metastases (n = 2), haemopericardium (n = 2), and biopsies could be performed in tumoral or suspicious areas. These guided biopsies revealed a metastasis in 3 cases where the pericardial window was negative. No sign of tuberculosis was found in the 5 cases where the disease was suspected. The final diagnoses were: neoplastic pericarditis in 4 cases, radiation-induced pericarditis in 2 cases, purulent pericarditis in 2 cases, haemopericardium in 3 cases and idiopathic or reactive pericarditis in 9 cases. The post-operative period was uneventful, with no major complication ascribable to the procedure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a genetically inherited autosomal recessive disease characterized by dehydration of the airway surface liquid and impaired mucociliary clearance leading to chronic respiratory infections, bronchiectasis and ultimately death from respiratory causes. Common pulmonary related complications resulting from bronchiectasis include pneumothorax and hemoptysis. A rare, seldom reported complication is acute pericarditis complicating cystic fibrosis. Our review of the literature identified only a single case of culture-proven purulent pericarditis attributed to Pseudomonas aeruginosa in a patient receiving systemic corticosteroids. A second reported case of acute pericarditis in a CF patient was attributed to Mycoplasma pneumoniae which is a known cause of infectious-related pericarditis independent of CF. Both cases required open pericardial drainage with 1 fatality. Here we present a case of cardiac tamponade from a fibrinous pericardial effusion in a 21-year-old female as a complication of CF related parenchymal lung disease. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of a non-infectious parapneumonic pericardial effusion causing near fatal cardiac tamponade as a complication of CF lung disease.  相似文献   

20.
Bacterial pericarditis is a rare disease in the era of antibiotics. Purulent pericarditis is most often caused by Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae, or Haemophilus influenzae. The number of H. parainfluenzae infections has been increasing; in rare cases, it has caused endocarditis. We report a case of purulent pericarditis caused by H. parainfluenzae in a 62-year-old woman who reported a recent upper respiratory tract infection. The patient presented with signs and symptoms of pericardial tamponade. Urgent pericardiocentesis restored her hemodynamic stability. However, within 24 hours, fluid reaccumulation led to recurrent pericardial tamponade and necessitated the creation of a pericardial window. Cultures of the first pericardial fluid grew H. parainfluenzae. Levofloxacin therapy was started, and the patient recovered. Haemophilus parainfluenzae should be considered in a patient who has signs and symptoms of purulent pericarditis. Prompt diagnosis, treatment, and antibiotic therapy are necessary for the patient''s survival. To our knowledge, this is the first report of purulent pericarditis caused by H. parainfluenzae.Key words: Endocarditis, bacterial/diagnosis/microbiology/pathology; haemophilus/isolation & purification; haemophilus infections/diagnosis/drug therapy; haemophilus parainfluenzae; pericarditis/complications/diagnosis/etiology/microbiology/therapy; suppuration/diagnosis; treatment outcomePurulent pericarditis is a disease process that is usually described as a secondary infection from a primary site in the respiratory tract. The condition has been associated with respiratory disease processes such as pneumonia or empyema, but it can be a sequela of endocarditis, chest trauma, chest surgery, or the hematogenous spread of infection from elsewhere in the body.1 Haemophilus influenzae has been suspected as a cause of purulent pericarditis; however, H. parainfluenzae has not previously been reported as a cause. Haemophilus parainfluenzae organisms are considered to be normal respiratory flora with low pathogenicity. However, H. parainfluenzae is being more frequently implicated in a variety of infections.2,3 We present what we think is the first report of purulent pericarditis caused by H. parainfluenzae.  相似文献   

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