• Title/Summary/Keyword: Pericardial tamponade

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Pericardial Tamponade following Perihepatic Gauze Packing for Blunt Hepatic Injury (둔상성 간손상 환자의 손상 통제술 후 발생한 심낭압전)

  • Ye, Jin Bong;Sul, Young Hoon;Go, Seung Je;Kwon, Oh Sang;Kim, Joong Suck;Park, ang Soon;Ku, Gwan Woo;Lee, Min Koo;Kim, Yeong Cheol
    • Journal of Trauma and Injury
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    • v.28 no.3
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    • pp.211-214
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    • 2015
  • The primary and secondary survey was designed to identify all of a patient's injuries and prioritize their management. However 15 to 22.3% of patient with missed injuries had clinically significant missed injuries. To reduce missed injury, special attention should be focused on patients with severe anatomical injury or obtunded. Victims of blunt trauma commonly had multiple system involvement. Some reports indicate that inexperience, breakdown of estalished protocol, clinical error, and restriction of imaging studies may be responsible for presence of missed injury. The best way of reducing clinical significant of missed injuries was repeated clinical assessment. Here we report a case of severe blunt hepatic injury patient and pericardial injury that was missed in primary and secondary survey. After damage control surgery of hepatic injury, she remained hemodynamically unstable. Further investigation found cardiac tamponade during intensive care. This was managed by pericardial window operation through previous abdominal incision and abdominal wound closure was performed.

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Disappearance of pericardial effusion by suspected pericardial-pleural fistula in a Miniature Schnauzer dog

  • Kim, Hakhyun;Kang, Ji-Houn;Chang, Dongwoo
    • Korean Journal of Veterinary Research
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    • v.58 no.2
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    • pp.115-118
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    • 2018
  • A 13-year-old spayed female Miniature Schnauzer was presented with complaints of intermittent syncope. Pericardial effusion was confirmed based on the physical examination, thoracic radiographs and echocardiography. Subsequently, prompt pericardiocentesis was performed. Clinical abnormalities were immediately improved after pericardiocentesis. However, the clinical signs associated with acute collapse recurred. After the second pericardiocentesis, thoracic radiographs revealed pleural effusion, and the clinical signs resolved rapidly. The dog underwent pleural aspiration. Analysis of pleural fluid revealed almost similar features as the previous pericardial fluid. It was possible that a pericardial-pleural fistula was created during the pericardiocentesis. The pericardial and pleural effusion disappeared after the procedures.

Penetrating Wound of the Heart: A Report of Three Cases (심장관통자상의 응급수술 치험 3례)

  • 김공수;지행옥;김근호
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.4 no.1
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    • pp.43-50
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    • 1971
  • Three patients who sustained penetrating stab wound of the heart have been treated successfully by emergency thoracotomy in the Department of Thoracic Surgery, Chonnam University Hospital. There were two knife and one glass wound. The location of the injury were all on the right ventricle, but in one patient, it was penetrated to ventricular septum. All patients were in shock with a systolic pressure under 60 mmHg when admitted to the emergency room. In one of the three patients, blood pressure was not detectable and subsequently cardiac arrest. Two patients required immediate thoracotomy because of intrathoracic hemorrhage and increased pericardial tamponade and the other one required prompt thoracotomy because of sudden onset of cardiac arrest. There were no death postoperatively. Two patients are living without any complication in 4 years and 4 weeks after operation. One who had penetrating wound to ventricular septum, turned to cardiac decompensation, but he is living now in 4$\frac{1}{2}$ years after operation. Exploratory thoracotomy should be performed immediately in all the patients in whom a penetrating wound of the heart or pericardial tamponade following a penetrating wound of the chest wall is suspected.

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Primary Purulent Pericarditis with Cardiac Tamponade due to Oropharyngeal Polymicrobial Infection: A Case Report and Literature Review

  • Bhatarai, Mukul;Yost, Gregory;Good, Christopher W.;White, Charles F.;Nepal, Hitekshya
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.47 no.2
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    • pp.155-159
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    • 2014
  • Cardiac tamponade due to purulent pericarditis with a characteristic greenish fluid is rare in this antibiotic era. It is highly fatal despite early diagnosis and advanced treatment. Gram-positive cocci are the leading cause of purulent pericarditis, which usually results from a direct or hematogenous spread of organisms to the pericardium from the primary foci of infection. We describe an index case of rapidly developing pericardial tamponade caused by oropharyngeal polymicrobial infection in the absence of a primary source of infection in a 62-year-old man, who was successfully managed with emergency large-volume pericardiocentesis followed by pericardiectomy.

Deleyed Cardiac Tamponade After Open Heart Surgery (Two Cases Report) (개심술후에 발생한 지연성 심장압진증)

  • 김병열
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.218-221
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    • 1982
  • Delayed cardiac tamponade in an uncommon and frequently fatal complication after open-heart surgery. We had been experienced two cases of delayed cardiac tamponade as a complication of open-heart surgery and treated successfully by reinsertion of pericardial drain through subxiphoid route. First case was 60 years old female patient and underwent MVR under impression of MSi + Ti Second case was 19 years old male patient and underwent total correction of T.O.F.with Blalock shunt [Lt]. Both cases had Initial symptoms, which were epigastric pain, chest tightness, dropped blood pressure, and increased pulse rate and respiratory rate, mimic as low cardiac output syndrome after open-heart surgery. Roentgenogram of the chest showed a rapid increased cardiothoracic ratio. It is important to realize the presence of late cardiac tamponade for proper diagnosis of complication after open-heart surgery.

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Acute Extrapericardial Tamponade Caused by Blunt Chest Trauma -2 case reports- (흉부 둔상으로 발생된 급성 심낭외 압전 - 2예 보고 -)

  • Seo, Hong-Joo;Seo, Min-Bum;Im, Jin-Soo
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.43 no.2
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    • pp.188-190
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    • 2010
  • Sternal fracture is relatively common after blunt chest trauma, and this usually resolves without complication. But acute extrapericardial tamponade caused by sternal fracture and injury to the internal mammary artery secondary to blunt chest trauma is very rare. We report here on two cases of acute extrapericardial tamponade that were caused by blunt chest trauma.

Neonatal Tension Pneumopericardium (신생아 긴장성 심막 기종)

  • 손국희;김영삼;백완기;윤용한;김광호;성태정;전용훈;김정택
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.37 no.5
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    • pp.464-466
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    • 2004
  • Neonatal tension pneumopericardium is a serious disease that requires prompt diagnosis and treatment. If untreated, it may lead to cardiac tamponade and death. We report a case of neonatal tension pneumopericardium which was successfully treated by open pericardial window operation with review of literatures.

Drainage with the Seldinger Technique for Cardiac Tamponade (심장압전에 대한 Seldinger 방법을 이용한 심낭배액술 -2례 보고-)

  • Kim, Jong-Won;Park, Seo-Wan;Kim, Byeong-Jun
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.29 no.10
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    • pp.1152-1156
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    • 1996
  • Cardiac tamponade Is an acute, life-threatening emergency, requiring immediate decompression by a safe and simple method. The most effective method of drainage has been controversial. We experienced successful outcome for the treatment of cardiac tamponade with drainage using the Seldinger technique. The causes of the cardiac tamponade were hemopericardium after mitral and aortic valve replacement and malignant pericardial effusion due to primary lung cancer. They were treated with emergency rainage by the Seldinger technique without procedure-related complications. We believe that this technique is simple, safe for the treatment of cardiac tamponade.

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Acute Cardiac Tamponade, Report of 6 Cases (각종 원인에 의한 급성 Cardiac Tamponade: 6례 보고)

  • 조장환;이명진;홍승록
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.5 no.2
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    • pp.97-106
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    • 1972
  • We will report 6 cases of cardiac tamponade treated surgically at Severance Hospital during the past 9 years from 1964 to 1972 and reviewed literatures on cardiac tamponade. The age of patients was from 13 years to 45 years old. The male was 4 cases and the female 2 cases. The sites of injury were right atrium; 1 case, right ventricle; 2 cases, right ventricle and coronary artery; 1 case, left atrium; 1 case, and left ventricle; 1 case. 2 cases of cardiac tamponade developed following chest injury, 2 cases following pericardiocentesis,1 case due to continuous bleeding from sutured cardiotomy wound of left atrium following open mitral commissurotomy using cardiopulmonary bypass machine, and 1 case due to traumatic penetration of polyethylene catheter through right ventricle to pericardial sac, introduced via right jugular vein in order to monitor the central venous pressure. Central venous pressure was checked preoperatlvely in 5 cases. In all cases, central venous pressure was rised [the range of central venous pressure was 240 to 330 mmHg]. Immediately after operation,central venous pressure lowered to normal [the range was 80-100 mmHg]. Recently serial gas analysis of arterial blood were checked pre- and post-operatively for the evaluation of hemodynamic change of cardiac tamponade, but our data was not enough for evaluation. It should be studied further.

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Primary Pericardial Fibrosarcoma Presenting as Cardiac Tamponade - A case report - (심낭압전으로 발견된 원발성 심낭 섬유육종 - 1예 보고 -)

  • Lim, Ju-Yong;Sung, Kyu-Wan;Kang, Gil-Hyun;Yoo, Dong-Gon;Kim, Chong-Wook;Park, Chong-Bin
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.40 no.8
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    • pp.574-577
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    • 2007
  • Primary malignant neoplasm of the pericardium is very rare, Neoplastic involvement of the pericardium may result in rapidly developing hemorrhagic effusion. A 30-year-old male who occasionally suffered from chest tightness was referred to our hospital under the diagnosis of unstable angina. He presented with acute chest pain and severe dyspnea that had developed one day previously. The diagnostic investigations such as echocardiography, chest CT and magnetic resonance image suggested cardiac tamponade that was caused by rupture of the pericardial teratoma. An operation to remove the tumor and effusion was performed. The pericardial mass was completely excised, and the result of the frozen biopsy favored malignancy. The final pathologic report was malignant fibrosarcoma of the pericardium and no malignant cells were found on the cytology of the pericardial effusion. The patient had a smooth postoperative course and was referred to another hospital for additional radiation therapy. We report here on this case of cardiac tamponade that was caused by primary pericardial fibrosarcoma, and this required urgent diagnosis and surgical management.