Cardiothoracic Surgery: Pericardial Effusion & Cardiac Tamponade Pericardial Effusion CausesIdiopathicMalignancyUremiaIatrogenicTraumaticPost Myocardial InfarctionAcute PericarditisPresentationMost are Asymptomatic if Not Hemodynamically SignificantCan Cause Pericardial Tamponade & Hemodynamic InstabilityEKG Findings:Sinus TachycardiaLow QRS VoltageElectrical Alternans – Cyclic Beat-to-Beat Shift in the QRS Axis from Mechanical Swinging of the Heart within a Large EffusionDiagnosisDiagnosis: EchocardiogramCT or MRI May Be Useful if Echocardiogram is Non-DiagnosticSizeSmall: < 100 cc (< 10 mm Thick on Echo)Moderate: 100-500 cc (10-20 mm Thick on Echo)Large: > 500 cc (> 20 mm Thick on Echo)TreatmentCardiac Tamponade: Urgent Drainage*See BelowIndication for Diagnostic Fluid Sampling:Suspected Bacterial or Tuberculosis PericarditisSuspected Neoplastic PericarditisLarge Chronic (> 3 Months) Idiopathic EffusionSymptomatic Moderate-Large Effusion that Fails Medical TherapySmall-Moderate Effusion without Need for Diagnostic Sampling: Serial Exams & Echocardiograms Cardiac Tamponade DefinitionCardiac Filling Impeded by Pericardial FluidCan Occur with Only A Small Amount of FluidPhases*See Trauma: Cardiac TraumaPresentation*See Trauma: Cardiac TraumaDiagnosis*See Trauma: Cardiac TraumaTreatmentTraumatic Cardiac Tamponade:*See Trauma: Cardiac TraumaNon-Traumatic Cardiac Tamponade:Pericardiocentesis Indications:Hemodynamic InstabilityIdiopathic EtiologySternotomy Indications:Need for BiopsyEffusion Small or LoculatedPurulent EffusionCoagulopathicRecurrent Effusion