Acute Pericarditis: Causes, Diagnosis, and Management

Acute Pericarditis: Causes, Diagnosis, and Management

Acute pericarditis is the inflammation of the pericardium, the fibrous sac surrounding the heart. It presents with chest pain, pericardial friction rub, and characteristic ECG changes. Early recognition is crucial to prevent complications such as cardiac tamponade and constrictive pericarditis.


2. Causes of Acute Pericarditis

Acute pericarditis can be idiopathic or caused by infections, autoimmune diseases, malignancies, or metabolic disorders.

(A) Infectious Causes

  • Viral (most common): Coxsackievirus, influenza, echovirus, HIV
  • Bacterial: Tuberculosis, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Fungal: Histoplasmosis, Aspergillus (rare)

(B) Non-Infectious Causes

  • Post-myocardial infarction:
    • Early pericarditis (1-3 days post-MI)
    • Dressler’s syndrome (autoimmune, weeks post-MI)
  • Autoimmune Diseases: SLE, rheumatoid arthritis, scleroderma
  • Uremic Pericarditis: Chronic kidney disease, dialysis patients
  • Malignancy: Lung cancer, breast cancer, lymphoma, leukemia
  • Radiation Therapy: Chest irradiation
  • Drugs: Hydralazine, isoniazid, procainamide
  • Trauma: Blunt chest trauma, post-cardiac surgery

3. Clinical Features

Symptom/Sign Clinical Features
Chest Pain Sharp, pleuritic, worsens with supine position, relieved by sitting forward
Pericardial Friction Rub High-pitched, scratchy sound heard best at the left sternal border
ECG Changes Diffuse ST elevation, PR depression
Fever Low-grade fever in viral pericarditis
Dyspnea Due to pericardial effusion or tamponade

🔹 Pleuritic chest pain + pericardial rub + ECG changes = Classic Triad of Pericarditis


4. Diagnosis of Acute Pericarditis

(A) Diagnostic Criteria (NICE & ESC Guidelines)

Diagnosis requires at least 2 of 4 criteria:

  1. Typical chest pain (sharp, pleuritic, improves with sitting forward)
  2. Pericardial friction rub
  3. ECG changes (Diffuse ST elevation, PR depression)
  4. Pericardial effusion (Echocardiography)

(B) ECG Changes in Acute Pericarditis

Stage ECG Findings
Stage 1 Diffuse ST elevation, PR depression
Stage 2 ST normalization
Stage 3 T wave inversion
Stage 4 Normalization of T waves

(C) Laboratory & Imaging Workup

Test Purpose
ESR/CRP Inflammatory markers (elevated)
Cardiac Troponins Mildly elevated in myopericarditis
Echocardiogram Detects pericardial effusion, tamponade
CXR May show cardiomegaly in large effusion
Pericardiocentesis If purulent or neoplastic pericarditis suspected

5. Management of Acute Pericarditis

(A) First-Line Treatment (Idiopathic/Viral Pericarditis)

Drug Indication Dose & Duration
NSAIDs (Ibuprofen) Pain relief, inflammation reduction 600-800 mg TDS for 1-2 weeks
Aspirin Post-MI pericarditis 650-1000 mg TDS for 1-2 weeks
Colchicine Reduces recurrence risk 0.5 mg BD for 3 months
Gastric Protection (PPI) Prevents GI irritation from NSAIDs Omeprazole 20 mg OD
See also  Myocardial Infarction (MI): Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, and Management

🔹 Colchicine + NSAIDs/Aspirin is the preferred treatment
🔹 Avoid corticosteroids unless NSAIDs are contraindicated

(B) Specific Management in Secondary Pericarditis

Cause Management
Bacterial Pericarditis IV antibiotics, urgent pericardial drainage
Tuberculous Pericarditis Anti-TB therapy (RIPE regimen)
Uremic Pericarditis Intensified dialysis
Malignant Pericarditis Pericardiocentesis, chemotherapy

6. Complications of Acute Pericarditis

🚨 Pericardial Effusion → Fluid accumulation in the pericardial sac
🚨 Cardiac Tamponade → Compression of the heart, requiring emergency pericardiocentesis
🚨 Constrictive Pericarditis → Chronic fibrosis leading to diastolic dysfunction

(A) Signs of Cardiac Tamponade (Beck’s Triad)

  • Hypotension
  • Distended neck veins (JVP elevation)
  • Muffled heart sounds

Other signs: Pulsus paradoxus (BP drop >10 mmHg on inspiration), Electrical alternans on ECG


7. Key Takeaways

Acute pericarditis presents with pleuritic chest pain, pericardial friction rub, and diffuse ST elevation.
Viral infections and idiopathic causes are most common.
NSAIDs + colchicine are first-line therapy; steroids are used in refractory cases.
Complications include cardiac tamponade (Beck’s triad) and constrictive pericarditis.
Urgent pericardiocentesis is needed for cardiac tamponade.


Further Reading

  • NHS Overview of Pericarditis: NHS UK
  • European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Guidelines: ESC Guidelines
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