4. TYPES OF PLEURAL EFFUSIONS
• Serous effusions
• Fluid accumulates slowly and is well tolerated
• Most common causes are CHF & hypoproteinemia.
• Serosanguineous effusions
• Usually result from blunt chest trauma.
• Chylous fluid accumulations
• Due to lymphatic obstruction (benign or malignant).
• Hemopericardium
• Traumatic perforation
• Cardiac rupture
• Intrapericardial aortic rupture
5.
6. SEROUS PERICARDITIS
• Nonbacterial causes
• Microscopically there is scant pericardial acute and
chronic inflammatory infiltrate, mostly lymphocytes.
•
7. FIBRINOUS PERICARDITIS
• Most common clinical form of pericarditis.
• Associated by pericardial friction rub.
• Exudate may either be completely absorbed or can
organize leaving delicate stringy adhesions (Adhesive
pericarditis) or there may be a plaque-like thickening
of epicardium.
8. A window of adherent
pericardium has
been opened to
reveal the surface of
the heart. There are
thin strands of
fibrinous exudate that
extend from the
epicardial surface to
the pericardial sac.
This is typical for a
fibrinous
pericarditis.
10. SUPPURATIVE PERICARDITIS
• Purulent pericarditis is typically composed of 400
to 500 ml of thin-to-creamy pus with erythematous,
granular serosal surfaces.
• Clinical presentation: High fever ; Rigors ; Friction
rub
• On organization: Constrictive / Mediastino-
pericarditis
14. HEMORRHAGIC PERICARDITIS
• The term hemorrhagic pericarditis is used when
fibrinous or suppurative pericarditis exudate is mixed
with blood oozing into the pericardial sac.
• It usually organizes with or without calcification.
15. CHRONIC OR HEALED
PERICARDITIS
• An acute pericarditis on healing may have:
• Complete resolution
• Pericardial fibrosis
• Thick nonadherent epicardial plaque
• Thin delicate adhesions
• Massive thick adhesions
16. ADHESIVE MEDIASTINO-
PERICARDITIS
• It is a clinically significant pericarditis in which the
cavity of pericardial sac is obliterated and the parietal
pericardium is adherent to mediastinal tissues.
• The heart contracts against the load of all attached
structures.
• There is subsequent hypertrophy of ventricles and
later dilation.
17. CONSTRICTIVE PERICARDITIS
• It is a clinically significant pericarditis with markedly
thick (up to 1 cm thick) dense fibrous obliteration of
the pericardial sac with or without calcification.
• The heart is encased with limited diastolic expansion
and restricted cardiac output.