Pneumopericardium: Difference between revisions
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==Evaluation== | ==Evaluation== | ||
[[File:PMC2700481 ATM-04-75-g032.png|thumb|Lucent line around the heart extending up to the main pulmonary arteries (solid white arrows). Air may accumulate inferior to the cardiac shadow, which crosses the midline above the diaphragm (i.e. continuous diaphragm sign)]] | |||
[[File:PMC4782482 APC-9-94-g002.png|thumb|Pneumopericardium on chest x-ray after battery button ingestion.]] | [[File:PMC4782482 APC-9-94-g002.png|thumb|Pneumopericardium on chest x-ray after battery button ingestion.]] | ||
[[File:Pneumothorax hemothorax pneumomediastinum contusion.jpg|thumb|CT scan showing pneumopericardium with pneumomediastinum, pneumothorax, hemothorax, and pulmonary contusion after severe chest trauma<ref>Konijn AJ, Egbers PH, Kuiper MA (2008). "Pneumopericardium should be considered with electrocardiogram changes after blunt chest trauma: a case report". J Med Case Reports. 2 (1): 100. doi:10.1186/1752-1947-2-100. PMC 2323010. PMID 18394149.</ref>]] | [[File:Pneumothorax hemothorax pneumomediastinum contusion.jpg|thumb|CT scan showing pneumopericardium with pneumomediastinum, pneumothorax, hemothorax, and pulmonary contusion after severe chest trauma<ref>Konijn AJ, Egbers PH, Kuiper MA (2008). "Pneumopericardium should be considered with electrocardiogram changes after blunt chest trauma: a case report". J Med Case Reports. 2 (1): 100. doi:10.1186/1752-1947-2-100. PMC 2323010. PMID 18394149.</ref>]] | ||
Revision as of 03:28, 2 April 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
CT scan showing pneumopericardium with pneumomediastinum, pneumothorax, hemothorax, and pulmonary contusion after severe chest trauma[1]
- 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[2]
- 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[3]
- Bright spots moving along pericardial layer during diastole
- Comet-tail artefacts extending across heart and disappearing during systole
Management
- Treat underlying cause
- Conservative management usually sufficient (usually self-resolves)
- If tamponade physiology, may require pericardiocentesis
- If communicating pneumothorax, chest tube placement may resolve both[4]
Disposition
- If underlying cause is stable and patient is asymptomatic, may discharge home
- Most patients will require admission for treatment of underlying cause
See Also
References
- ↑ Konijn AJ, Egbers PH, Kuiper MA (2008). "Pneumopericardium should be considered with electrocardiogram changes after blunt chest trauma: a case report". J Med Case Reports. 2 (1): 100. doi:10.1186/1752-1947-2-100. PMC 2323010. PMID 18394149.
- ↑ Bell, D. et al. Pneumopericardium. Radiopaedia.org. Retrieved March 8 2019.
- ↑ Bobbia et al. (2013). Pneumopericardium diagnosis by point-of-care ultrasonography. Journal of Clinical Ultrasound, 4(14), May 2013.
- ↑ Braiteh, F., and Malik, I. (2008). Pneumopericardium. Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine, 179(10).
