Drug induced chest pain-rare but important. (17/361)

Pericarditis, usually viral in origin, is an infrequent cause of chest pain. Pericarditis due to drug allergy is even less frequent and is thus rarely considered in the differential diagnosis. A case is reported of a woman who presented with severe chest pain, caused by minocycline induced pericarditis. Such allergy may be more common than reported. It is suggested that drug induced pericarditis should be included in the differential diagnosis of acute chest pain.  (+info)

Serial antinuclear antibodies titre in pleural and pericardial fluid. (18/361)

The antinuclear antibodies (ANA) test has been a cornerstone of the evaluation of connective tissue disease. The aim of this study was to investigate the diagnostic value of the ANA test in pleural or pericardial effusions of unknown causes. Over a 3-yr period, a total of 126 pleural fluid and 30 pericardial fluid samples were analysed. ANA tests were performed using a commercially available kit. The ANA kit used an indirect immunofluorescent antibody method with a human epithelial (HEP-2) cell line as substrate. Patients with high fluid ANA titre (>1:160) received a second aspiration 2 weeks after the initial aspiration if diagnosis was not confirmed. ANA results were positive in 39 pleural and 10 pericardial fluid samples. All but one of the effusions with positive ANA testing were exudative. Eleven pleural or pericardial effusions due to active systematic lupus erythematosus were identified and all had high ANA titres (1:160) with various staining patterns. Thirty-eight of 145 patients (26%) with effusions of nonlupus aetiologies had positive ANA testing in pleural or pericardial fluid. Thirteen of these 38 patients had high ANA titre. Malignant or paramalignant effusions constituted 11 of the 13 samples. In conclusion, although a negative antinuclear antibodies test makes a diagnosis of lupus serositis unlikely, high antinuclear antibodies titres in pleural or pericardial fluid are not diagnostic of lupus serositis even when as high as 1:5,120. An unexplained high antinuclear antibodies titre in pleural or pericardial effusion warrants search for malignancy.  (+info)

Single site radiofrequency catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation: studies guided by simultaneous multisite mapping in the canine sterile pericarditis model. (19/361)

OBJECTIVES: To test the hypothesis that when activation of Bachmann's bundle (BB) is critical to the unstable reentrant circuits that maintain atrial fibrillation (AF) in the sterile pericarditis canine model, a lesion in BB would prevent induction of stable AF. BACKGROUND: One mechanism of induced AF in this model is multiple unstable reentrant circuits, which frequently include BB as part of the reentrant pathway. METHODS: Simultaneous multisite mapping studies during AF and after ablation of BB were performed by recording (384 to 396 electrodes) from both atria and the atrial septum during six induced AF episodes in six dogs with sterile pericarditis. Activation maps of AF (mean duration, 24 +/- 28 min) during 12 consecutive 100-ms windows were analyzed. RESULTS: During AF, multiple unstable reentrant circuits (mean, 1.2 +/- 0.2 per window; range, 1 to 4) were observed, 68% involving BB. Nonactivation zones (mean duration, 57 +/- 16 ms in the right atrium and 53 +/- 23 ms in the left atrium) observed during AF were reactivated by a wave front most often coming from the atrial septum via BB (right atrium, 62%; left atrium, 67%). After successful radiofrequency catheter ablation of the midportion of BB, AF >5 s was not induced in all dogs. Mapping studies of transient AF (< or =5 s) induced after ablation showed neither reentrant circuits nor wave fronts activating the right atrium via BB. CONCLUSIONS: In this AF model, catheter ablation of BB terminates and prevents the induction of AF by preventing 1) formation of unstable reentrant circuits that involve BB, and 2) activation of the atrial-free walls after a nonactivation period.  (+info)

Myopericarditis caused by cyclophosphamide used to mobilize peripheral blood stem cells in a myeloma patient with renal failure. (20/361)

Cyclophosphamide (CPA) is widely used for peripheral blood stem cell mobilization, and a dose adjustment of CPA in the presence of renal failure has not been suggested. However, we describe a myeloma patient with renal failure (serum creatinine 4.2 mg/dl, creatinine clearance 11.2 ml/min) receiving CPA 2 g/m2 for 2 days, who developed unexpectedly severe toxicity, including myopericarditis and prolonged myelosuppression. The serial serum concentrations of CPA metabolites were persistently much higher than those in a myeloma patient with normal renal function. We consider, therefore, that the dose of CPA should be reduced in the presence of severe renal failure when used as high-dose therapy or to mobilize peripheral blood stem cells.  (+info)

Pericardial defect presenting as acute pericarditis. (21/361)

A case of herniation of the left atrial appendage, through a defect in the pericardium, is described in a 16-year-old boy who was below the third percentile for height and weight. The clinical presentation was an acute pericarditis. Widespread inversion of T waves on the electrocardiogram and collapse of the lower lobe of the left lung with pleural effusion developed. Thoracotomy showed strangulation of the atrial appendage which was excised, and the pericardial defect repaired. After operation there was a striking improvement in the electrocardiogram and a rapid gain in weight. Syndromes caused by pericardial defects are reviewed.  (+info)

Transient hyperechogenicity of the fetal pericardium: a case report. (22/361)

An unusually echogenic fetal pericardium was visualized using ultrasound at 21 weeks' gestation. Serial prenatal examinations revealed its progressive, spontaneous resolution. Follow-up examinations of the newborn and infant failed to demonstrate any clinical or echocardiographic abnormality. The occurrence of this unusual pericardial abnormality and its transient nature should be considered during sonographic examination of the fetus.  (+info)

Pericardial constriction due to malignant lymphoma. (23/361)

We experienced a case of T-cell lymphoma demonstrating diastolic heart failure as an initial manifestation. An 81-year-old Japanese male was admitted to the University of Tokyo Hospital because of progressive dyspnea and general fatigue. Clinical presentation was congestive heart failure and cervical lymphadenopathy. Right heart catheterization revealed "dip and plateau" waveforms in right ventricular pressure, which suggested a constrictive nature of heart failure. Gallium scintigram showed marked uptake in the heart. Biopsy from a cervical lymph node confirmed the diagnosis of malignant lymphoma of T-cell origin. Diastolic heart failure remained after successful chemotherapy. Autopsy revealed pericarditis with severe adhesion of the pericardium and the epicardium.  (+info)

Cardiac rupture caused by Staphylococcus aureus septicaemia and pericarditis: an incidental finding. (24/361)

A 35 year old woman with a long history of intravenous drug abuse presented to a local hospital with severe anaemia, fever, raised markers of inflammation, and positive blood cultures for Staphylococcus aureus. She responded to treatment with antibiotics with improvement in her symptoms and markers of inflammation. Four weeks later a "routine" echocardiogram showed a rupture of her left ventricular apex and a large pseudoaneurysm. There had been no deterioration in her symptoms or haemodynamic status to herald this new development. It was successfully repaired surgically and the patient made a good recovery.  (+info)