
pmid: 34817937
Pericarditis is the most common form of pericardial disease. Its exact incidence remains unknown, probably because many cases resolve without diagnosis. Indications for pericardiectomy from the standpoint of the cardiac surgeon are based mainly on the physiopathology of 2 different entities that can overlap: inflammatory or relapsing pericarditis and constrictive pericarditis. Surgical indications are not always straightforward. Patients with inflammatory or relapsing pericarditis may undergo radical pericardiectomy because they experience severe symptoms despite maximal medical treatment or have sequelae from the medical treatment. Pericardiectomy is the standard treatment in patients with chronic constrictive pericarditis and persistent symptoms who are in New York Heart Association functional class III or IV and a class I recommendation in the European Society of Cardiology/European Association of Cardio-Vascular Surgery guidelines. The goal of surgery is always complete removal of any site of inflammation through a radical pericardiectomy.
Pericardiectomy, Pericarditis, Constrictive, Humans
Pericardiectomy, Pericarditis, Constrictive, Humans
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