30 I take this opportunity of acknowledging the valuable aid I have received from Dr. Webb in preparing this essay on affections of the pericardium.
31 Philadelphia Medical Times, vol. ii.
The PROGNOSIS of adherent pericardium depends rather upon the secondary consequences, upon the condition of the muscular walls, the hypertrophy, the dilatation, the coexistence of valvular disease, than upon the adherent pericardium itself. Yet there is a tendency to sudden death caused by it. In 115 instances of sudden death, Aran has recorded 9 of complete pericardial adhesion.
The TREATMENT must be that of the consequences with careful attention to the state of the muscular walls. Digitalis is indicated in cases with dilatation and flabby walls. Early in the case repeated small blisters and a course of iodide of potassium may be tried. But it is doubtful whether any useful result will be accomplished.
Hæmopericardium.
Hæmopericardium, or blood or blood and serum in the pericardial cavity, is rarely met with except as a result of rupture of the heart, injury to the pericardium by perforation or crushing, aneurisms, and in pericarditis occurring in diseases of a low type with degeneration of the blood, as in scurvy and purpura hæmorrhagica.
In rupture of the heart the effusion of blood into the sac is rarely rapid, and death is not immediate unless the rupture be large. Rapid distension of the pericardium with blood speedily causes death by embarrassing the action of the heart and by producing anæmia of the brain. Thus the rupture of an aneurism into the pericardial sac is of necessity quickly fatal. Penetrating wounds may be the cause of a bloody accumulation in the pericardium and give rise to serious symptoms. But the injury is not always fatal, since large vessels are not likely to be cut; the hemorrhage is slow, thus permitting the pericardium to accommodate itself to the fluid; and if the amount of blood be not very large, it may be ultimately absorbed. Crushing injuries to the chest may produce effusion of blood into the pericardium by lacerating small vessels, and may burst the coronary arteries if they be diseased. The foregoing are traumatic causes; the true hæmopericardium is due to the effusion of blood or blood and serum in diseases of malnutrition and in dyscrasias which have special tendencies toward the serous membrane, particularly to the pericardium. This does not take note of the bloody effusions or of a certain amount of blood in the serum which may occur in the course of acute pericarditis; but rather of those diseases, such as scurvy, purpura, and chronic alcoholism, in which the blood is broken down, the tissues weakened, the degenerated vessels rupture or are no longer able to contain their contents, and in which the blood or bloody serum accumulates speedily in the pericardium, without or with but slight previous inflammation.
The physical signs of hæmopericardium are the same as in other effusions into the sac, with this difference—that in the traumatic kind the area of cardiac dulness is rapidly increased, while at the same time the fluid never reaches the bulk of other effusions, for before this can happen death occurs. Friction phenomena are not perceived. There are as symptoms dizziness and faintness, drowsiness, difficulty of breathing, sense of præcordial oppression, weak pulse, and, when myocarditis exists, pain in the heart. The prognosis generally is unfavorable. Death, if not the direct result of the causes producing hæmopericardium, is due to the hemorrhage or to failure of the heart.
The TREATMENT consists in absolute rest, in giving readily-digested food, and in supporting the action of the heart; for this purpose stimulants may be required, unless something in the history of the case forbid. Of course it will also be important to keep the emunctories, especially the kidneys, freely at work, and to modify the condition of the blood in the cases associated with dyscrasias. The mineral acids and ergot are remedies to be borne in mind.
Hydropericardium.