1987
DOI: 10.1177/088506668700200106
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Pericardial Disease in the Intensive Care Setting

Abstract: Pericardial disease commonly occurs in the intensive care setting, but its timely diagnosis may be missed. The normal pericardium serves as a lubricated sac within which the heart may beat with minimal friction. The effect of the pericardium on cardiac filling at normal diastolic pressures is not clear; however, it may limit cardiac dilation in states of acute volume overload such as mitral regurgitation and right ventricular infarction. Pericardial disease may be divided into two catego ries : those cases th… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Indeed, acute pericarditis alone has a list of causes that literally spans the entire range of medicine and surgery [2]. This is the background for the length, at least, of the article by Thomas and LeWinter [3]. Although the authors make a very restricted division of pericardial disease (&dquo;two broad categories&dquo;), that limited division is probably satisfactory in considering the intensive care setting.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, acute pericarditis alone has a list of causes that literally spans the entire range of medicine and surgery [2]. This is the background for the length, at least, of the article by Thomas and LeWinter [3]. Although the authors make a very restricted division of pericardial disease (&dquo;two broad categories&dquo;), that limited division is probably satisfactory in considering the intensive care setting.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%