Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3249922 The Journal of Emergency Medicine 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundCardiac tamponade is a life-threatening disease in which hypotension is believed to be a common finding. Prior inpatient studies have described normotensive or hypertensive cases of tamponade; however, because the data were not collected from the Emergency Department (ED), the hemodynamic spectrum may differ from those presenting to the ED.ObjectivesWe hypothesized that hypotension is uncommon in patients presenting to the ED with non-traumatic tamponade.MethodsA retrospective chart review was conducted between January 2002 and December 2007 of patients presenting to our ED who were subsequently diagnosed with cardiac tamponade.ResultsA total of 34 patients were identified with a diagnosis of tamponade. The mean blood pressure on ED arrival was 131/79 mm Hg. Upon initial presentation to the ED, 35% (n = 12) of patients were hypertensive, 50% (n = 17) were normotensive, and 15% (n = 5) were hypotensive. Of the 5 patients who were hypotensive on ED arrival, only 2 (6% of all patients) remained hypotensive upon admission to the hospital and before a pericardiocentesis. An average of 995 mL of fluid was removed from the pericardium. The chief complaint for the majority of patients in tamponade was shortness of breath (70%); 59% were tachycardic in the ED, and 72% had cardiomegaly on chest X-ray study.ConclusionsHypotension is uncommon in patients presenting to the ED with non-traumatic cardiac tamponade. The majority of patients are normotensive or even hypertensive. Thus, the emergency physician should not exclude the diagnosis of tamponade even in light of normotension or hypertension.

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