Pericarditis
Diagnostic criteria
typical chest pain
pericardial friction rub
suggestive ECG changes (typically widespread ST-segment elevation, PR depression)
+/-
new or worsening pericardial effusion
increased CRP/ESR (supports diagnosis but neither sensitive nor specific for pericarditis)
Investigations
cardiac auscultation
ECG
transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE)
ESR/CRP, CBC, creatinine, troponin, CK-MB
blood cultures
CXR
pericardial fluid for C&S and mycobacterial culture by Cardiology
Differential diagnosis
infectious (viral, bacterial, mycobacterial, fungal, parasitic)
-
non-infectious:
autoimmune
neoplastic
metabolic
traumatic
drug-related
Viral (~90%)
Usually Enterovirus
Rare:
S. aureus/MRSA
ß-haemolytic Streptococci
S. pneumoniae
H. influenzae
Enterobacterales
Ureaplasma spp
Mycoplasma spp
M. tuberculosis
Viral pericarditis
Empiric Therapy | Dose | Duration |
---|---|---|
Self-limited | ||
No antiviral therapy |
Purulent pericarditis
Empiric Therapy | Dose | Duration |
---|---|---|
Vancomycin | 60mg/kg/d IV div q6h | 6 weeks |
+ | ||
Ceftriaxone | 100mg/kg IV q24h |