BMC Cardiovascular Disorders (Apr 2012)

Cardiac tamponade related to a coronary injury by a pericardial calcification: an unusual complication

  • Cypierre Anne,
  • Pesteil Francis,
  • Cassat Claude,
  • Parraf François,
  • Bellier Rémy,
  • Ursulet Lionel,
  • Eveno Claire,
  • Vignon Philippe,
  • François Bruno

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2261-12-28
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 28

Abstract

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Abstract Background Cardiac tamponade is a rare but severe complication of pericardial effusion with a poor prognosis. Prompt diagnosis using transthoracic echocardiography allows guiding initial therapeutic management. Although etiologies are numerous, cardiac tamponade is more often due to a hemopericardium. Rarely, a coronary injury may result in such a hemopericardium with cardiac tamponade. Coronary artery aneurysm are the main etiologies but blunt, open chest trauma or complication of endovascular procedures have also been described. Case presentation A 83-year-old hypertensive man presented for dizziness and hypotension. The patient had oliguria and mottled skin. Transthoracic echocardiography disclosed a circumferential pericardial effusion with a compressed right atrium, confirmed by contrast-enhanced thoracic CT scan. A pig-tail catheter allowed to withdraw 500 mL of blood, resulting in a transient improvement of hemodynamics. Rapidly, recurrent hypotension prompted a reoperation. An active bleeding was identified at the level of the retroventricular coronary artery. The pericardium was thickened with several "sharping" calcified plaques in the vicinity of the bleeding areas. On day 2, vasopressors were stopped and the patient was successfully extubated. Final diagnosis was a spontaneous cardiac tamponade secondary to a coronary artery injury attributed to a "sharping"calcified pericardial plaque. Conclusion Cardiac tamponade secondary to the development of a hemopericardium may develop as the result of a myocardial and coronary artery injury induced by a calcified pericardial plaque.

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