atrial fibrillation after pericardial reconstruction using extracellular matrix (NCT01247974) have not yet
been reported.
Reconstruction of the pericardium is important when there is a risk of cardiac herniation. When resection of
the pericardium is required during pneumonectomy due to a central lung tumor or an extrapleural
pneumonectomy for mesothelioma, the pericardium should be reconstructed to prevent herniation into
the empty hemithorax.32 Cardiac herniation must be quickly recognized if the patient becomes
hypotensive postoperatively. The pericardial defect is reconstructed with a 0.1-mm Gore-Tex mesh. The
mesh should be fenestrated with small incisions to allow fluid to escape decreasing the risk of
tamponade. Reconstruction of the pericardium may also help to prevent inflammatory epicarditis which
can lead to constrictive physiology after extrapleural pneumonectomy.33
PERICARDIECTOMY
Pericardiectomy is most commonly performed for constrictive pericarditis. It can be performed through
a median sternotomy or a left anterior thoracotomy in the fifth intercostal space. Anterior thoracotomy
allows removal of the pericardium over the left ventricle with minimal manipulation. Femoral
cannulation is used if bypass is necessary. Median sternotomy is the most common approach (Fig. 86-9).
Cardiopulmonary bypass increases the risk of bleeding and is used when significant cardiac
manipulation is needed or the dissection is difficult. The pericardium over the left ventricle is resected
first to avoid pulmonary edema from the right ventricle ejecting against a constricted left ventricle. The
pericardium is removed from phrenic nerve to phrenic nerve. Some patients have an immediate
improvement in hemodynamics and symptoms while others do not improve until weeks or months later.
A delayed or incomplete response is thought to be due to an incomplete resection of the visceral
pericardium or myocardial atrophy and fibrosis. Left ventricular function returned to normal in 40% of
patients.
Perioperative mortality has been reported between 5% and 15% and is due to low cardiac output,
sepsis, bleeding, and renal or respiratory failure.34 Seventy percent of mortality is due to low cardiac
output. Mortality is directly related to the patient’s preoperative status
35 and is 1% for New York Heart
Association class I to II, 10% for class III, and 46% for class IV.36 Five-year survival is 84%, and 99% of
late survivors were class I or II. Patients with constriction due to radiotherapy have a higher mortality
which may be due to radiation-induced myocardial injury. Other poor prognostic factors are renal
failure, advanced age, pulmonary hypertension, hyponatremia, and reduced cardiac output.34,37
Figure 86-9. Pericardiectomy is most commonly approached through a median sternotomy. A: The pericardium is incised, and the
fibrous pericardium dissected from the left ventricle. B: The heart is retracted to the right so that the pericardium can be resected
from phrenic nerve to phrenic nerve.
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10. Troughton RW, Asher CR, Klein AL. Pericarditis. Lancet 2004;363:717–727.
11. Brady WJ, Perron AD, Martin ML, et al. Cause of ST segment abnormality in ED chest pain
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12. Imazio M, Demichelis B, Cecchi E, et al. Cardiac troponin I in acute pericarditis. J Am Coll Cardiol
2003;42:2144–2148.
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Circulation 1995;92:3229–3234.
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16. Strang JI, Kakaza HH, Gibson DG, et al. Controlled clinical trial of complete open surgical drainage
and of prednisolone in treatment of tuberculous pericardial effusion in Transkei. Lancet 1988;2:759–
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17. Sagrista-Sauleda J, Barrabes JA, Permanyer-Miralda G, et al. Purulent pericarditis: review of a 20-
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18. Dressler W. A post-myocardial infarction syndrome; preliminary report of a complication
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19. Little WC, Freeman GL. Pericardial disease. Circulation 2006;113:1622–1632.
20. Maisch B, Seferovic PM, Ristic AD, et al. Guidelines on the diagnosis and management of
pericardial diseases executive summary; the Task force on the diagnosis and management of
pericardial diseases of the European society of cardiology. Eur Heart J 2004;25:587–610.
21. Ben-Horin S, Bank I, Guetta V, et al. Large symptomatic pericardial effusion as the presentation of
unrecognized cancer: a study in 173 consecutive patients undergoing pericardiocentesis. Medicine
(Baltimore) 2006;85:49–53.
22. Ditchey R, Engler R, LeWinter M, et al. The role of the right heart in acute cardiac tamponade in
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23. Beck C. Two cardiac compression triads. JAMA 1935;104:714.
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pericarditis. Am J Cardiol 1970;26:480–489.
25. Talreja DR, Edwards WD, Danielson GK, et al. Constrictive pericarditis in 26 patients with
histologically normal pericardial thickness. Circulation 2003;108:1852–1857.
26. Abdalla IA, Murray RD, Lee JC, et al. Does rapid volume loading during transesophageal
echocardiography differentiate constrictive pericarditis from restrictive cardiomyopathy?
Echocardiography 2002;19:125–134.
27. Hatle LK, Appleton CP, Popp RL. Differentiation of constrictive pericarditis and restrictive
cardiomyopathy by Doppler echocardiography. Circulation 1989;79:357–370.
28. Ben-Horin S, Shinfeld A, Kachel E, et al. The composition of normal pericardial fluid and its
implications for diagnosing pericardial effusions. Am J Med 2005;118:636–640.
29. Tsang TS, Enriquez-Sarano M, Freeman WK, et al. Consecutive 1127 therapeutic
echocardiographically guided pericardiocenteses: clinical profile, practice patterns, and outcomes
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30. Dantas CE, Sa MP, Bastos ES, et al. Pericardium closure after heart operations: a safety option? Rev
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31. Boyd WD, Johnson WE 3rd, Sultan PK, et al. Pericardial reconstruction using an extracellular
matrix implant correlates with reduced risk of postoperative atrial fibrillation in coronary artery
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32. Kobayashi H, Nomori H, Mori T, et al. Extrapleural pneumonectomy with reconstruction of
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33. Byrne JG, Karavas AN, Colson YL, et al. Cardiac decortication (epicardiectomy) for occult
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34. Ling LH, Oh JK, Schaff HV, et al. Constrictive pericarditis in the modern era: evolving clinical
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35. Seifert FC, Miller DC, Oesterle SN, et al. Surgical treatment of constrictive pericarditis: analysis of
outcome and diagnostic error. Circulation 1985;72:II264–II273.
36. McCaughan BC, Schaff HV, Piehler JM, et al. Early and late results of pericardiectomy for
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Chapter 87
Vascular Diagnostics: The Noninvasive Vascular
Laboratory
Gregory L. Moneta
Key Points
1 Duplex ultrasound consists of a combination of gray-scale imaging and pulse Doppler. Because the
speed of sound is relatively constant in tissue, with a pulse Doppler it can be determined when an
echo is generated and when it is received. This provides range resolution enabling the operator of
the duplex machine to precisely sample and interrogate blood flow at a known location.
2 When a sound wave encounters moving reflectors, such as red blood cells, the frequency of the
reflected wave changes from that of the original wave generated by the transducer. This relationship
is reflected in the Doppler equation: fr − fo = [(2fov)/c] cos θ, Where fr is the received frequency, fo
is the originating frequency, v is the velocity of the reflector, c is the speed of sound in tissue, and θ
is the angle of the incident sound beam with the moving reflectors, the so-called Doppler angle.
3 Arterial Doppler waveforms reflect the resistance of the circulation supplied by the artery being
examined. Low resistance circulations such as cerebral and renal circulations have relatively high
amounts of diastolic flow whereas high-resistance circulations, such as extremity arteries have little
flow at the end of diastole.
4 Carotid stenosis is determined primarily from measurement of peak systolic velocity (PSV) and enddiastolic velocity (EDV) from pulse Doppler waveforms using criteria agreed upon in a national
consensus conference.
5 Air plethysmography can be used to display pulse volume waveforms. Pulse volume recordings
(PVRs) are obtained with partially inflated blood pressure cuffs that detect volume changes
sequentially down a limb. Volume changes beneath the cuffs resulting from the pulse wave result in
small pressure changes within the cuffs. These changes are displayed as arterial waveforms with the
use of appropriate transducers and provide an overall measure of the arterial circulation in an
extremity.
6 The ankle brachial index (ABI) is determined by dividing the higher ipsilateral dorsal pedal or
posterior tibial artery pressure by the higher of the two brachial artery systolic pressures and is
highly sensitive and specific for documenting the presence or absence of lower extremity arterial
occlusive disease.
7 Measurement of ankle pressures after exercise can be used to confirm arterial disease as an etiology
for exercise-associated leg pain. Failure of the ankle pressure to drop with exercise along with failure
of the ABI to decrease 20% with exercise, combined with a normal resting ABI, substantially rules
out arterial insufficiency as an etiology of exercise-induced complaints of leg pain.
8 Duplex ultrasound can detect hemodynamically significant stenosis in abdominal arteries: a PSV in
the superior mesenteric artery (SMA) of 275 cm/s or more indicates a ≥70% SMA stenosis, a celiac
artery PSV of ≥200 cm/s indicates a ≥70% celiac artery stenosis whereas a ratio of the PSV in a
renal artery to that in the aorta (renal–aortic ratio, RAR) of ≥3.5 indicates a ≥60% diameterreducing renal artery stenosis.
9 The primary ultrasound diagnostic criterion for diagnosis of venous thrombosis is failure of the vein
to collapse with application of pressure with the ultrasound probe.
10 In the upright position, venous reflux stimulated by cuff deflation that lasts >0.5 to 1 second is
indicative of pathologic venous reflux.
The noninvasive vascular laboratory provides accurate, safe, and objective evidence of the presence and
physiologic significance of vascular disease throughout the body. Two broad categories of testing are
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available in the noninvasive vascular laboratory; those based on plethysmographic techniques, and those
based on ultrasound-based techniques.
PLETHYSMOGRAPHY
Plethysmographic techniques detect volume changes in limbs that occur in response to arterial and
venous disease. The technology can be modified to determine digital pressures and produce pulse
waveforms. Examples of plethysmographic techniques include mercury strain gauge plethysmography,
air plethysmography (pulse volume recordings [PVRs]), and photoplethysmography.
ULTRASOUND
Ultrasound techniques, in particular duplex ultrasound-based technique, have largely eclipsed
plethysmographic techniques. Duplex ultrasound, introduced in 1974, was first applied to carotid
arteries. The technique combines information from ultrasound-generated images (B-mode) and Doppler
analysis of blood flow direction and velocity, hence the term “duplex.” Duplex ultrasound is currently
extensively employed for evaluation of carotid arteries, intra-abdominal arteries and veins and upper
and lower extremity arteries and veins. Since inception duplex ultrasound has advanced through: (1)
improved B-mode imaging, (2) better low-frequency scan heads permitting deeper penetration of the
ultrasound beam from the skin surface, (3) improvements in online computer-based microprocessor
software, and (4) perhaps, most importantly, the addition of color flow to the B-mode image.
Color flow superimposes a real-time color image of blood flow onto a standard gray-scale B-mode
picture. Returning echoes from stationary tissues generate the B-mode image, whereas those interacting
with moving substances (blood) generate a significant enough phase shift that they can be processed
separately and color-coded by operator selection to give information on direction and velocity of blood
flow according to the magnitude and direction of the Doppler frequency shift. It is color flow, combined
with the ability of the current generation of duplex scanners to detect very low blood flow velocities
(<5 cm/s), which makes duplex scanning practical on a routine basis throughout the body. Color flow
permits more rapid identification of vessels to be examined and is essential for duplex examination of
some vessels such as tibial arteries and veins.
BASICS OF DUPLEX ULTRASOUND
An ultrasonic wave is produced in tissue by placing a vibrating source in contact with the tissue. In
medical ultrasound the vibrating source is the ultrasound transducer contained within the ultrasound
scan head. The scan head steers and focuses the sound beam arising from the transducer, functions
crucial in deriving an ultrasound image from returning echoes.
Ultrasound transducers convert electrical energy into vibrational energy and, conversely, turn
vibrational energy of returning echoes into electrical signals that can be analyzed by the software of the
duplex machine. The design of the transducer determines the frequency of the vibrations which in turn
determines the wavelength of the sound wave produced. The relationship between frequency and
wavelength is expressed mathematically as follows:
Where λ is the wavelength, c is the speed of sound in tissue and f is the incident frequency.
The speed of sound in soft tissues averages 1,540 m/s and varies only minimally from this average in
soft tissues insonated in clinical applications of duplex ultrasound. The wavelength of the sound beam is
the primary determinant of how well the ultrasound beam penetrates the tissue. Because the speed of
sound within the tissue is, for all practical purposes, constant (1,540 m/s), the ability of ultrasound to
penetrate tissue depends on the frequency of the vibrating source (transducer). As noted above,
transducer frequency is determined by the design of the transducer and is thus controlled by the
manufacturer of the duplex device. For examination of the carotid artery, transducer frequencies of 5 to
7.5 MHz provide optimal tissue penetration for clinical purposes.
As noted above the term duplex refers to the combination of Doppler and B-mode (“B” stands for
“brightness”) ultrasound in the same device. Both types of ultrasound require analysis of reflected
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