Pneumopericardium: Difference between revisions

Line 35: Line 35:
==Evaluation==
==Evaluation==
*Assess for underlying cause
*Assess for underlying cause
*Assess vital signs for tamponade physiology
*Assess vital signs for tamponade physiology (Beck's triad)
*Physical examination:
**May have subcutaneous emphysema
**May have succussion splash if there is also a pericardial effusion
**May have Hamman crunch
*[[CXR]]<ref>Bell, D. et al. Pneumopericardium. Radiopaedia.org. Retrieved March 8 2019.</ref>
*[[CXR]]<ref>Bell, D. et al. Pneumopericardium. Radiopaedia.org. Retrieved March 8 2019.</ref>
**Heart partially or completely surrounded by gas
**Heart partially or completely surrounded by gas

Revision as of 19:21, 8 March 2019

Background

  • Air in the pericardium
  • Generally secondary to connection between pericardium and pleural cavity, bronchi, or GI tract
  • Most often found following trauma, severe asthma exacerbation, strangulation, or forceful drug insufflation

Clinical Features

  • May present with tamponade physiology depending on size
  • Other features include:
    • Dyspnea
    • Cyanosis
    • Chest pain
    • Pulsus paradoxus
    • Bradycardia
    • Tachycardia

Differential Diagnosis

Causes of pneumopericardium

  • GI malignancy
  • PUD
  • Esophageal diverticula
  • Barotrauma
    • Mechanical ventilation
    • Vigorous bag-mask ventilation
    • SCUBA diving/rapid ascent
    • Drug insufflation (especially associated with crack cocaine)
  • Asthma
  • Valsalva
  • Infection pericarditis with gas-producing bacteria
  • Thoracic surgery
  • Pericardial fluid drainage
  • Blast injury
  • Blunt or penetrating Thoracic trauma
  • Neonatal respiratory distress syndrome

Evaluation

  • Assess for underlying cause
  • Assess vital signs for tamponade physiology (Beck's triad)
  • Physical examination:
    • May have subcutaneous emphysema
    • May have succussion splash if there is also a pericardial effusion
    • May have Hamman crunch
  • CXR[1]
    • Heart partially or completely surrounded by gas
    • Pericardium sharply outlined by gas density on either side
    • Continuous diaphragm sign may be present (diaphragm seen continuously across the midline
  • PoCUS[2]
    • Bright spots moving along pericardial layer during diastole
    • Comet-tail artefacts extending across heart and disappearing during systole

Management

Disposition

See Also

References

  1. Bell, D. et al. Pneumopericardium. Radiopaedia.org. Retrieved March 8 2019.
  2. Bobbia et al. (2013). Pneumopericardium diagnosis by point-of-care ultrasonography. Journal of Clinical Ultrasound, 4(14), May 2013.