• Ann Trop Paediatr · Dec 1999

    Purulent pericarditis: clinical profile and outcome following surgical drainage and intensive care in children in Chandigarh.

    • M Jayashree, S C Singhi, R S Singh, and M Singh.
    • Department of Pediatrics, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India.
    • Ann Trop Paediatr. 1999 Dec 1;19(4):377-81.

    AbstractPurulent pericarditis, though rare in developed countries, is not uncommon in developing countries. However, the type of pericardial drainage required and the risk of subsequent constrictive pericarditis has not been clearly defined. Thirty children between the ages of 3 months and 12 years with a diagnosis of purulent pericarditis were studied retrospectively. Pericardial effusion was confirmed in all by echocardiography and the diagnosis of bacterial pericarditis was based on aspiration of purulent fluid with leucocytosis and high proteins. Purulent pericarditis was a part of the disseminated sepsis in 25 (83%) children. Fever was present in all, hepatomegaly in 28 and breathlessness in 25, whereas muffled heart sounds, raised JVP and pericardial rub were found in only 18, 16 and 7, respectively. The ECG was abnormal in only 16 children. Staphylococcus aureus was the causative organism in 24 (96%). Open surgical drainage was done in 26 children, 23 of whom underwent anterior pericardiectomy. Two children died of disseminated sepsis. None of the 21 who returned for follow-up for periods of between 4 and 24 months had any long-term sequelae.

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