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Pericardial rupture leading to cardiac herniation after blunt trauma

Timothy M. Guenther, Tanya N. Rinderknecht, Ho H. Phan, Curtis J. Wozniak, Víctor Rodríguez

2020Trauma Case Reports19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pericardial rupture with cardiac herniation is a rare traumatic injury with an estimated incidence of 0.37% after blunt trauma. Most commonly occurring after high-speed impact, such as in motor vehicle or motorcycle collisions, pericardial rupture is associated with a high mortality rate. Radiologic diagnosis can be challenging; cross-sectional imaging findings can be suggestive of pericardial rupture but are often non-specific, and echocardiography windows are often obscured. Definitive diagnosis is generally made intra-operatively. Treatment involves reduction of the heart into normal anatomic position with repair of the pericardium, either primarily or with a patch. Fewer than 60 cases of pericardial rupture from blunt trauma have been reported in the literature. We describe a 65 year old poly-trauma patient who sustained pericardial rupture with subsequent cardiac herniation with cardiovascular collapse, and we discuss the considerations and complexities of his successful repair.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePericardiumBluntCardiac RuptureSurgeryBlunt traumaRadiologyCardiologyMyocardial infarctionTrauma Management and DiagnosisPericarditis and Cardiac TamponadeCardiac Structural Anomalies and Repair
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