Case Reports in Cardiology (Jan 2013)

Atypical Chest X-Ray Calcification in an Idiopathic Constrictive Pericarditis Case

  • Uğur Coşkun,
  • İsmail Polat Canbolat,
  • Ümit Yaşar Sinan,
  • Cem Bostan,
  • Kadriye Kılıçkesmez,
  • Ahmet Yıldız,
  • Murat Başkurt,
  • Fatma Nihan Turhan Çağlar,
  • Alican Hatemi,
  • Cenk Eray Yıldız,
  • Sadettin Cöhcen,
  • Aziz Tevfik Gürmen,
  • Mehmet Serdar Küçükoğlu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/609610
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2013

Abstract

Read online

Constrictive pericarditis is an uncommon cause of heart failure. It is a clinical entity caused by thickening, fibrosis, and/or calcification of the pericardium. We present a 50-year-old female patient who was admitted to our institution with a 6-month history of progressive dyspnea on exertion, abdominal swelling, and lower extremity edema. Her chest X-ray revealed an oblique linear calcification in the cardiac silhouette. Transthoracic echocardiography revealed biatrial enlargement. Left ventricular size and systolic function were normal. Cardiac computed tomography revealed the pericardial thickening (>5 mm) and heavy calcification in left atrioventricular groove. Simultaneous right and left heart catheterization showed elevation and equalization of right-sided and left-sided diastolic filling pressures, with characteristic dip, and plateau. Pericardiectomy was performed which revealed a thick, fibrous, calcified, and densely adherent pericardium constricting the heart. The postoperative period was uneventful and was in NYHA functional class I after 3 months.