Circulation, Vol 79, 603-609, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
HA Valantine, SA Hunt, R Gibbons, ME Billingham, EB Stinson and RL Popp
Although pericardial effusion after cardiac surgery is frequent and usually
benign, its etiology and prognosis after cardiac transplantation are
unknown. During 1 year (1985-1986), 12 of our current transplant population
(total, 189) developed moderate or large pericardial effusions confirmed by
two-dimensional echocardiography. These effusions occurred within 1 month
of transplantation in 10 patients and at 3 months and 4.5 years in the
other two. Pericardiocentesis was performed because of clinical evidence of
increasing effusions in eight patients, with demonstrable hemodynamic
compromise secondary to tamponade in five. Pericardial fluid was sterile in
all but one. Endomyocardial biopsy at the time of increasing effusion
revealed moderate acute rejection in five patients, mild rejection in
three, and no rejection in four. All three patients with mild rejection had
moderate acute rejection on subsequent biopsy performed within 7 days. In
two of the four with no rejection, repeat biopsy within 5 days showed
moderate acute rejection; in a third, moderate rejection was present on
biopsy performed 14 days later. Legionella dumoffii was isolated from the
pericardial fluid of the fourth patient, whose subsequent biopsies never
showed rejection. Three of the 12 patients developed progressive
ventricular dysfunction sufficiently severe to require retransplantation.
One patient died suddenly 12 months after transplantation, and autopsy
examination revealed severe coronary artery disease. Two died of sepsis
within 3 months of transplantation. Intense inflammatory infiltrates and
thickening of the pericardium and epicardium were characteristically
present in explanted and autopsy hearts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Increasing pericardial effusion in cardiac transplant recipients
Division of Cardiology, Stanford University School of Medicine, California 94305.
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