Imaging in Constrictive Pericarditis
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Constrictive pericarditis (CP) is a reduction in the elasticity, or stiffening, of the pericardium, a sack-like covering that surrounds the heart, resulting in impaired filling of the heart with blood. The symptoms of CP appear insidiously, with patients displaying peripheral edema, anasarca, and elevated right-sided heart pressures. Patients frequently present with symptoms that are not thought to be due to cardiac disease; these include exercise intolerance, dyspnea, liver failure, and renal failure. [1, 2]
(See the images of constrictive pericarditis below.)
The diagnosis is rarely considered by the referring physician, who usually may think that the symptoms are due to another disease process. Patients may present with increasing weight gain, cardiac cirrhosis, and massive ascites. [3, 4, 5] The physician is most likely to refer patients with these symptoms to the radiologist for abdominal ultrasonography, abdominal and pelvic CT, or hepatobiliary scanning, thinking that the patient’s symptoms are related to a liver disorder.
Patients respond dramatically to a complete surgical pericardiectomy when it is performed early in the disease process; therefore, it is important to consider CP when making the diagnosis. Anatomic imaging findings, such as calcifications (see the images below) and thickening of the pericardium, may be present, but the most reliable and most important findings are related to the filling pattern of the heart.
The severity of the clinical symptoms is best correlated with findings from dynamic observation of the blood flow and from findings relative to the obstruction and poor filling of the right-sided cardiac chambers.
Various imaging methods (echocardiography, magnetic resonance imaging [MRI], computed tomography [CT]) can depict changes in cardiac chamber volumes throughout the cardiac cycle, as well as the timing of fluid motion backward into veins and forward into arteries.
Both restrictive and constrictive diseases exhibit an abrupt reduction in filling, increased back pressure, and impaired stroke volume (volume of fluid ejected per heartbeat). Catheterization can be used to observe the pressure levels in various chambers during filling. The influence of respiration on filling contributes important diagnostic information, both for imaging and for catheterization.
In CP, the size of the heart is usually normal; flattening of the right ventricle and curving of the intraventricular septum to the left (see the image below) are sometimes found. The azygos vein and superior vena cava (SVC) are commonly dilated.
Restrictive disease (stiff muscle), such as that in dialysis patients with chronic amyloidosis, mimics the physiologic pattern of constrictive disease (stiff muscle). Amyloidosis does not cause CP, but it can cause a restrictive cardiomyopathy that can mimic the clinical, imaging, and physiologic alterations of CP.
Symptoms of amyloidosis do not respond to pericardiectomy. Cardiac tamponade, a condition in which fluid accumulates in the pericardial space, is also in the differential diagnosis of impaired filling; however, it is usually not difficult to distinguish tamponade from restrictive or constrictive disease on images.
It is important to recognize the less common effusive–constrictive pericarditis syndrome. About 10% of patients who are initially recognized as having cardiac tamponade present with signs and symptoms of constriction following pericardiocentesis. The causes of effusive–constrictive pericarditis are similar to those of typical constriction, although patients with this syndrome may have a more acute presentation and are more likely to respond to anti-inflammatory therapy. [6]
Echocardiographic findings can also suggest CP. Duplex Doppler waveforms and inflow velocities across the mitral and tricuspid valves can be assessed during inspiration and expiration. This assessment is not part of the routine protocol in most echocardiography laboratories, and unless the physician is alerted to the possibility of CP, the diagnosis is almost never suspected.
Dynamic respiratory criteria can also be applied during right- and left-sided heart catheterization when equalization of end-diastolic pressures in the heart chambers and characteristic venous waveforms are present.
Transient constrictive pericarditis is increasingly recognized as a distinct subtype of constrictive pericarditis. The underlying pathophysiology typically relates to impaired pericardial distensibility, associated with acute or subacute inflammation, rather than the fibrosis or calcification often seen in chronic pericardial constriction. Patients may present with concomitant features of pericarditis and constrictive physiology. Echocardiography remains the mainstay for initial evaluation of the dynamic features of constriction. However, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging can provide complementary functional information, with the addition of dedicated sequences to assess for active pericardial edema and inflammation. [7]
In the minority of patients in whom the diagnosis of CP is suspected on a clinical basis, the first test should be plain posteroanterior (PA) and lateral chest radiography. Chest x-ray in patients with constrictive pericarditis may show pleural effusions without significant alveolar edema and biatrial enlargement. LV and RV and pulmonary vessels are normal in size. [6] If the results show characteristic pericardial calcification, the diagnosis of CP is essentially established. Pericardial calcifications are rare, occurring in 20-40% of constrictive cases and, more commonly, in tuberculous pericarditis. [6] The classic and most common distribution is largely over the right ventricle; this appearance can be considered pathognomonic. [8]
If the plain radiographic findings are negative and clinical suspicion of CP is present, echocardiography with an evaluation of Doppler inflow velocities of the mitral and tricuspid valves during inspiration and expiration should be performed. [9, 10, 11, 12, 13] Ventricular interdependence is present in all patients with significant constrictive physiologies.
Transthoracic 2-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography is usually the first diagnostic tool in the evaluation of severe diastolic heart failure (HF) and can reliably identify CP in most patients by characteristic real-time motion of the heart and hemodynamic features. CT and MRI provide incremental data for the diagnosis and management of CP and are especially helpful when clinical or echocardiographic findings are inconclusive. [14] Both cardiac MRI and CT can guide surgical planning, but MRI provides both structural and functional information. [15]
No imaging test is definitive for the diagnosis of CP in all patients who have the disease. In a patient in whom the clinical findings are suggestive of the disease, noninvasive imaging findings that are consistent with CP are usually sufficient to prompt definitive surgery or an invasive evaluation in the catheterization laboratory.
The diagnosis of CP is more difficult in patients without calcification. Pericardial thickening of 4 mm or more on CT scans or MRIs is considered evidence of CP for patients with the appropriate symptoms; however, focal thickening of 4 mm or more commonly occurs in patients without physiologic or clinical evidence of constrictive physiology. The converse is also true. Rarely, a constrictive physiology can be present without abnormal thickening of the pericardium.
All of the noninvasive imaging techniques have limitations in the diagnosis of CP. Ultimately, the diagnosis is made at surgery; however, in the appropriate patient, CT, ultrasonography, conventional radiography, MRI, echocardiography, and right- and left-sided heart catheterization results can be highly suggestive of CP.
A major problem is differentiating restrictive cardiomyopathy from CP. Furthermore, it is difficult to preoperatively predict which patients are likely to respond to total pericardiectomy.
Plain chest radiographs may show pericardial calcification in as many as 50% of CP patients, although anecdotal evidence suggests that this number is decreasing. The cardiac silhouette should be small in a patient with uncomplicated CP.
CP can also coexist with cardiomyopathy, and a large heart does not exclude the disease. Other, less reliable plain radiographic findings include an abnormal cardiac contour, such as straightening of the right atrial border and, more rarely, straightening of the right and left cardiac borders, with obliteration of the normal curves, on frontal images. On fluoroscopy, diminished cardiac pulsation may be seen.
In a patient with diffuse pericardial calcification on radiographs and appropriate clinical symptoms of constrictive physiology, the diagnosis of CP can be reliably made. The absence of calcification does not exclude the disease, and further testing should include an extensive workup in the echocardiography laboratory, with an assessment of the Doppler velocities across the mitral and tricuspid valves during inspiration and expiration. Calcification does not appear in the images below.
Because complete surgical pericardiectomy is usually effective (but not without a risk of morbidity and mortality), most patients also undergo simultaneous right- and left-sided heart catheterization, with a measurement of various pressures during inspiration and expiration.
If the radiograph is positive for pericardial calcifications and the patient’s symptoms are consistent with CP, false-positive findings should not occur. The diagnosis is difficult to make in patients with CP but without pericardial calcifications. In these patients, normal findings on plain radiographs are false negatives.
CT is recognized as an excellent tool to determine pericardial thickness and the most sensitive technique to identify pericardial calcification. [15] Abdominal CT is most often performed in patients in whom the diagnosis of CP is not being considered on the basis of clinical findings. The symptoms in these patients are usually thought to be associated with a liver disorder. The radiologist can be of great service to the patient if CP is considered in the presence of appropriate imaging findings. [16, 17]
(See the CT scans of constrictive pericarditis below.)
The pericardium should be diffusely thicker than 3 mm; however, many patients do not present with this finding, and the diagnosis of CP should not be discarded if thickening is not present. The size of all 4 heart chambers should be within the normal range; however, CP can coexist with other diseases, and global or focal dilatation of the cardiac chambers does not exclude CP.
The inflow veins to the right atrium, including the SVC, inferior vena cava (IVC), and hepatic veins, should be dilated. This finding is necessary but not sufficient to make the diagnosis of CP because it commonly occurs in the setting of congestive heart failure brought on by a variety of causes. Most often, when the hepatic veins and IVC are dilated for reasons other than CP, dilation of one or all of the cardiac chambers is present and caused by systolic dysfunction or valve disease. If significant cirrhosis has already occurred, the hepatic veins may not be dilated.
There should be no progression of the contrast-agent bolus through the vascular system, and evidence of significant systolic dysfunction should be absent. For example, if the injection protocol involves a 60-second delay from the time of the injection to the start of scanning, contrast enhancement in the portal veins and waning of that enhancement in the abdominal aorta are usually seen.
In CP, there should be poor opacification of liver parenchyma due to congestion, and there should be no contrast enhancement in the portal vein.
In the appropriate patient, CT findings can be highly suggestive of CP; however, because the preferred treatment is total pericardiectomy, which has significant morbidity and mortality risks, almost all patients should be referred for cardiac echocardiography and/or simultaneous right- and left-sided heart catheterization.
Focal or diffuse thickening of the pericardium can occur in the absence of constrictive physiology. An apparently delayed bolus of contrast material can be caused by technical factors in the acquisition of the CT scan. Dilated veins can be caused by right-sided heart failure. Liver cirrhosis can mimic the CT findings of CP.
Diffuse thickening of the pericardium greater than 3 mm can be observed on multiplanar MRIs. [18]
ECG-triggered MRI is sensitive to constrictive disease of the pericardium because the fibrous layers are bordered by fat, which produces a distinct MRI signal. MRI can be used to measure pericardial thickness; the ideal views for measuring pericardial thickness are oriented perpendicular to the long axis of the left ventricle. MRI can also be used to measure chamber sizes at successive 50-msec delays after the R wave and to determine whether or not a filling plateau is present.
Like echocardiography and/or Doppler imaging, velocity-encoded (VENC) MRI can be used to assess volumetric flow and regurgitant flow to the pulmonary veins and the hepatic vein. MRI can demonstrate focal abnormalities and can cover the heart to determine whether the disease encapsulates its entirety.
Fast imaging can be performed during deep respiration to establish whether filling is concordant or discordant. CP restriction creates discordance with reduced left ventricular filling, which corresponds to increased right ventricular filling.
MRI dynamically shows a reversed curvature of the intraventricular septum clearly. [19]
MRI does not depict pericardial calcifications, but otherwise, MRI is highly sensitive and specific. The main limitation with MRI is the greater cost relative to echocardiography. Furthermore, most patients with CP who are referred for imaging are not suspected of having the disease; therefore, MRI is rarely ordered to rule out CP.
A patient may have focal or even diffuse thickening on MRIs without a constrictive physiology. Conversely, a patient may have a constrictive physiology with subtle, diffuse thickening of the pericardium of less than 3 mm (which is the upper limit of the normal range); however, the physiologic alteration created by CP can be evaluated by performing VENC MRI of the pulmonary and hepatic veins and velocities across the mitral and tricuspid valves. This technique is usually reliable in detecting constrictive physiology.
Transthoracic echocardiography has limited accuracy to assess pericardial thickness and was present in only 37% of CP patients; transesophageal echocardiography is superior but is rarely performed for this indication alone. Pericardial adhesion may be evident as thickened, parallel, adherent pericardial layers that are pulled together during systole. Pericardial tethering and restricted posterior wall motion are commonly reported in patients with CP. [15]
Cardiac echograms show normal contraction and systolic function. Special procedures, including an assessment of Doppler velocities across the mitral and tricuspid valves during inspiration and expiration, are needed to demonstrate ventricular interdependence. Unless the staff in the echocardiography laboratory is alerted to the clinical suspicion of CP, the diagnosis is often not considered and, therefore, is missed. [11, 12, 13]
Echocardiographic procedures, such as the evaluation of the early diastolic Doppler myocardial velocity gradients at the posterior wall, echocardiographic tissue Doppler imaging (TDI), and color M mode flow propagation, have been reported to enhance the differentiation between CP and restrictive cardiomyopathy. [20, 21]
Liver sonograms show dilated hepatic veins and abnormal pulse Doppler waveforms in the portal and hepatic veins due to outflow obstruction. Budd-Chiari syndrome, cirrhosis, and right-sided heart failure can mimic some of the findings of CP at liver ultrasonography. Abdominal ultrasonographic findings are nonspecific and must be confirmed with echocardiography and cardiac catheterization results.
In a study of 34 patients with CP and 26 patients with restrictive cardiomyopathy caused by cardiac amyloidosis, Butz et al concluded that echocardiographic TDI is an effective modality for differentiating CP from restrictive cardiomyopathy. [20]
Employing receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis, Butz and coworkers found that determining a combination of the systolic longitudinal velocity (S’) and the early diastolic longitudinal velocity (E’), each with a cutoff value of less than 8 cm per second, at the lateral and septal mitral annulus resulted in a diagnostic specificity and sensitivity of 88% and 93%, respectively, for restrictive cardiomyopathy. [20]
Lu et al concluded that the use of a combination of 2-D echocardiography and quantitative TDI (QTDI) provides an effective method of diagnosing pericardial adhesion in patients with CP. [22] The authors used quantitative tissue displacement curves to measure systolic peak displacements of the pericardium (D[1]), the outer-layer myocardium (D[2]), and the inner-layer myocardium (D[3]) in 20 patients and 20 controls. They found that in patients with CP, the ratio (D[3] – D[2])/(D[2] – D[1]) was significantly higher than it was in the controls.
Because of liver function abnormalities caused by hepatic congestion, hepatobiliary scanning (see the image below) is often ordered for patients in whom CP is not suspected. The hepatobiliary scan findings are impaired hepatic clearance of the agent from the blood pool and severely impaired excretion of the radiopharmaceutical agent into the biliary tree.
Gated nuclear ventriculography may show rapid ventricular filling in CP. Reportedly, these findings can be used to differentiate CP from restrictive cardiomyopathy.
Many conditions that are more common than CP can impair hepatic uptake and excretion of the radiopharmaceutical agent. If the physician is perceptive enough to consider the diagnosis of CP, the diagnosis must be confirmed with echocardiography and heart catheterization.
Hepatitis, drug-induced cholestatic liver disease, severe cirrhosis, and severe right-sided heart failure can cause findings similar to those of CP.
Angiography usually has no role in the evaluation of CP. Simultaneous right- and left-sided heart catheterization and measurement of cardiac chamber pressures during inspiration and expiration are the most useful confirmatory tests.
Measurements obtained in the catheterization laboratory can be highly suggestive of CP. Although considered the criterion standards, the traditional hemodynamic criteria used in the catheterization laboratory for the diagnosis of CP are neither sensitive nor specific, and they significantly overlap with those of restrictive diseases that can also alter the diastolic filling properties. The criteria are as follows:
End-diastolic pressure equalization is present: The difference between the left and the right ventricular end-diastolic pressures is 5 mm Hg or less.
Pulmonary arterial pressure is less than 55 mm Hg.
The right ventricular end-diastolic pressure divided by the right ventricular end-systolic pressure is greater than 1/3.
A dip-and-plateau diastolic pressure morphology, as reflected by height of the left ventricular rapid filling wave (>7 mm Hg) is present.
The Kussmaul sign is present: The mean right atrial pressure does not decrease during inspiration.
Significant information can also be gained from echocardiography. Ultimately, the diagnosis must be confirmed surgically at the time of complete pericardiectomy. Only 50% of patients respond to surgery, but in many patients, the symptoms dramatically resolve.
Restrictive heart disease can mimic some manifestations of CP at catheterization or echocardiography.
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John S To, MD Consulting Staff, Department of Radiology, Dickinson County Healthcare System
John S To, MD is a member of the following medical societies: Alpha Omega Alpha, American College of Radiology, American Medical Association, American Roentgen Ray Society, Massachusetts Medical Society, Michigan State Medical Society, Radiological Society of North America
Disclosure: Nothing to disclose.
Bernard D Coombs, MB, ChB, PhD Consulting Staff, Department of Specialist Rehabilitation Services, Hutt Valley District Health Board, New Zealand
Disclosure: Nothing to disclose.
Robert M Steiner, MD Professor of Radiology and Medicine, Temple University School of Medicine; Radiologist, Jeanes Hospital, Temple University Hospital
Robert M Steiner, MD is a member of the following medical societies: American College of Cardiology, American College of Chest Physicians, American College of Radiology, American Heart Association, Radiological Society of North America, Society of Thoracic Radiology, North American Society for Cardiac Imaging
Disclosure: Nothing to disclose.
Eugene C Lin, MD Attending Radiologist, Teaching Coordinator for Cardiac Imaging, Radiology Residency Program, Virginia Mason Medical Center; Clinical Assistant Professor of Radiology, University of Washington School of Medicine
Eugene C Lin, MD is a member of the following medical societies: American College of Nuclear Medicine, American College of Radiology, Radiological Society of North America, Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging
Disclosure: Nothing to disclose.
Justin D Pearlman, MD, ME, PhD, FACC, MA Chief, Division of Cardiology, Director of Cardiology Consultative Service, Director of Cardiology Clinic Service, Director of Cardiology Non-Invasive Laboratory, Chair of Institutional Review Board, University of California, Los Angeles, David Geffen School of Medicine
Justin D Pearlman, MD, ME, PhD, FACC, MA is a member of the following medical societies: American College of Cardiology, International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, American College of Physicians, American Federation for Medical Research, Radiological Society of North America
Disclosure: Nothing to disclose.
Imaging in Constrictive Pericarditis
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