Trauma sternotomy for presumed haemopericardium with incidental coccidioidal pericarditis

Background: Disseminated cocciodiomycosis with extrapulmonary disease occurs in less than 1% of infected patients, with few cases involving the pericardium reported in the literature. A subxiphoid window in a focussed assessment with sonography for trauma is a fast and reliable study for detecting h...

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Main Author: Seth I. Felder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-02-01
Series:Trauma Case Reports
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352644015000035
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spelling doaj-e112387225d24048a9eddb326ee078792020-11-24T23:57:53ZengElsevierTrauma Case Reports2352-64402015-02-011148Trauma sternotomy for presumed haemopericardium with incidental coccidioidal pericarditisSeth I. Felder0Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Department of Surgery, 8635 West Third Street, Suite 650, Los Angeles, CA 90048, United States. Tel.: +1 310 423 8513; fax: +1 310 423 5454.; Department of Surgery, Division of Trauma and Critical Care, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, United StatesBackground: Disseminated cocciodiomycosis with extrapulmonary disease occurs in less than 1% of infected patients, with few cases involving the pericardium reported in the literature. A subxiphoid window in a focussed assessment with sonography for trauma is a fast and reliable study for detecting haemopericardium in the haemodynamically unstable injured patient. Methods: Case report and literature review. Case report: A 50-year old man presented in extremis following a stab wound to the right thoracoabdominal region with a positive pericardial ultrasound. At the time of emergent sternotomy, the pericardial effusion appeared non-traumatic and not the cause of haemodynamic instability. Lung, diaphragm, liver and transverse colon lacerations were controlled by laparotomy. He was discovered to have extensive adenopathy within the mediastinum, porta hepatis, and lesser sac, which after histopathologic examination, demonstrated granulomatous lymphadenitis consistent with disseminated cocciodiomycosis. Conclusions: This case report describes the first reported “incidental” pericardial effusion in a haemodynamically unstable patient sustaining a thoracoabdominal stab wound discovered on a positive ultrasound study. Emergent operative exploration and subsequent workup determined the pericardial fluid to be of infectious origin, rather than traumatic. With the incidence of cocciodiomycosis within endemic geographic regions significantly rising, coccidioidal pericarditis may become an increasingly relevant cause of fluid detected on noninvasive pericardial examination. Keywords: Trauma, Infection, Focussed assessment with sonography for trauma (FAST)http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352644015000035
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seth I. Felder
spellingShingle Seth I. Felder
Trauma sternotomy for presumed haemopericardium with incidental coccidioidal pericarditis
Trauma Case Reports
author_facet Seth I. Felder
author_sort Seth I. Felder
title Trauma sternotomy for presumed haemopericardium with incidental coccidioidal pericarditis
title_short Trauma sternotomy for presumed haemopericardium with incidental coccidioidal pericarditis
title_full Trauma sternotomy for presumed haemopericardium with incidental coccidioidal pericarditis
title_fullStr Trauma sternotomy for presumed haemopericardium with incidental coccidioidal pericarditis
title_full_unstemmed Trauma sternotomy for presumed haemopericardium with incidental coccidioidal pericarditis
title_sort trauma sternotomy for presumed haemopericardium with incidental coccidioidal pericarditis
publisher Elsevier
series Trauma Case Reports
issn 2352-6440
publishDate 2015-02-01
description Background: Disseminated cocciodiomycosis with extrapulmonary disease occurs in less than 1% of infected patients, with few cases involving the pericardium reported in the literature. A subxiphoid window in a focussed assessment with sonography for trauma is a fast and reliable study for detecting haemopericardium in the haemodynamically unstable injured patient. Methods: Case report and literature review. Case report: A 50-year old man presented in extremis following a stab wound to the right thoracoabdominal region with a positive pericardial ultrasound. At the time of emergent sternotomy, the pericardial effusion appeared non-traumatic and not the cause of haemodynamic instability. Lung, diaphragm, liver and transverse colon lacerations were controlled by laparotomy. He was discovered to have extensive adenopathy within the mediastinum, porta hepatis, and lesser sac, which after histopathologic examination, demonstrated granulomatous lymphadenitis consistent with disseminated cocciodiomycosis. Conclusions: This case report describes the first reported “incidental” pericardial effusion in a haemodynamically unstable patient sustaining a thoracoabdominal stab wound discovered on a positive ultrasound study. Emergent operative exploration and subsequent workup determined the pericardial fluid to be of infectious origin, rather than traumatic. With the incidence of cocciodiomycosis within endemic geographic regions significantly rising, coccidioidal pericarditis may become an increasingly relevant cause of fluid detected on noninvasive pericardial examination. Keywords: Trauma, Infection, Focussed assessment with sonography for trauma (FAST)
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352644015000035
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