Case Report
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2022.
World J Clin Cases. Jul 26, 2022; 10(21): 7577-7584
Published online Jul 26, 2022. doi: 10.12998/wjcc.v10.i21.7577
Table 1 Timeline
Day 1A 30-yr-old man was admitted to our hospital with a 2-mo history of cough, dyspnea, bloating, palpitation, and lower extremity oedema
Day 2The patient was taken to the ultrasound department for an echocardiogram showing a moderate-sized localized pericardial effusion, with an increase in the RAD and LAD (Figure 1)
Day 5The patient underwent pericardiocentesis to relieve the clinical conditions
Day 6The patient's clinical symptoms were slightly relieved
Day 8A repeat echocardiogram showed decreased pericardial effusion compared with the first examination and characteristic manifestations of pericardial constriction. A diagnosis of ECP was established (Figure 2)
Day 10A CT scan demonstrated a small amount of pericardial effusion with thickened pericardium
Day 15PET-CT examination ruled out neoplastic and connective tissue diseases
Day 17The patient underwent pericardectomy, which led to a rapid improvement in the clinical symptoms
Day 19Histologic examination performed on the pericardial tissue obtained during pericardectomy showed increased thickening with the proliferation of collagen fibers, hyaline degeneration, and calcification (Figure 4)
Day 20Cytologic examination of the pericardial fluid obtained during pericardectomy showed many inflammatory cells and few mesothelial cells. Cultures of the pericardial fluid and pericardium grew Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Day 24A repeat 2D-TTE 1 wk after pericardectomy revealed improvement in the biatrial diameter, Doppler features of pericardial constriction, and the right atrial pressure (Figure 3)
Day 26The patient was discharged home in stable condition
1 mo post-dischargeA follow-up echocardiogram revealed that the right atrial pressure assessed using echocardiography had significantly decreased in the absence of pericardial constriction echocardiographic features (Figure 5)