Kutcher M A, King S B, Alimurung B N, Craver J M, Logue R B
Am J Cardiol. 1982 Oct;50(4):742-8. doi: 10.1016/0002-9149(82)91228-0.
Among 5,207 adult patients who underwent cardiac surgery, postoperative constrictive pericarditis was recognized in 11 patients (0.2% incidence rate). Seven patients had coronary arterial bypass grafting and 4 had valve replacement; the pericardium was left open in all cases. The average interval between surgery and presentation of pericardial constriction was 82 days (range 14 to 186). M mode echocardiography revealed epicardial and pericardial thickening in 7 cases and variable degrees of posterior pericardial effusion in 5 cases. Cardiac catheterization demonstrated uniformity of diastolic pressures with a characteristic early diastolic dip and late plateau pattern. Two patients responded to medical therapy for chronic pericarditis. One patient had a limited parietal pericardiectomy followed by recurrent constrictive pericarditis that eventually stabilized with medical therapy. The other 8 patients required radical pericardiectomy. The pathophysiology of constriction after surgery is unclear. Its clinical expression involves a wide spectrum of presentation and therapeutic response. Constrictive pericarditis may be a complication of cardiac surgery in spite of an open pericardium and should be considered in postoperative patients who present with deteriorating cardiac function.