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Incidental finding of congenital pericardial defect during vats bullectomy. Tips and tricks to avoid blunder

The absence of a small portion of the pericardium is termed pericardial defect. This rare entity can be either acquired or congenital. The prevalence of congenital pericardial defect is exceedingly rare, which is approximately 0.002–0.004% of surgical and pathologic series. The most common type is t...

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Autores principales: Loo, Guo Hou, Ismail, Hafiz, Ismail, Muhammad Ishamuddin, Md Ali, Nur Ayub Bin, Abdul Rahman, Mohd Ramzisham Bin, Haron, Hairulfaizi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8429913/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34527238
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2021.102806
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author Loo, Guo Hou
Ismail, Hafiz
Ismail, Muhammad Ishamuddin
Md Ali, Nur Ayub Bin
Abdul Rahman, Mohd Ramzisham Bin
Haron, Hairulfaizi
author_facet Loo, Guo Hou
Ismail, Hafiz
Ismail, Muhammad Ishamuddin
Md Ali, Nur Ayub Bin
Abdul Rahman, Mohd Ramzisham Bin
Haron, Hairulfaizi
author_sort Loo, Guo Hou
collection PubMed
description The absence of a small portion of the pericardium is termed pericardial defect. This rare entity can be either acquired or congenital. The prevalence of congenital pericardial defect is exceedingly rare, which is approximately 0.002–0.004% of surgical and pathologic series. The most common type is the absence of the entire left side of pericardium, seen in 67% of all patients with a congenital pericardial defect. Other varieties are incredibly uncommon. Congenital pericardial defect has a male preponderance with a male to female ratio of 3:1, and familial occurrence is uncommon. We report a case of left partial congenital pericardial defect detected incidentally in a 22-year-old man who presented with recurrent left spontaneous pneumothorax. He underwent video-assisted thoracoscopic bullectomy and intraoperatively, we discovered a left partial pericardial defect which exposed the left atrial appendage. Although generally asymptomatic, patients may present with non-specific cardiac symptoms such as atypical chest pain. Partial pericardial defects have an increased risk of herniation of the whole left atrium, the left atrial appendage or the ventricles. If this occurs, cardiac strangulation may occur, leading to necrosis and sudden death. Cardiac MRI is a sensitive tool and will demonstrate the absence of preaortic pericardial recess. In conclusion, no surgical intervention is required in cases of congenital pericardial defect, unless the patient is symptomatic due to complications. If detected incidentally during cardiac or thoracic surgery, the best may be to leave it alone.
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spelling pubmed-84299132021-09-14 Incidental finding of congenital pericardial defect during vats bullectomy. Tips and tricks to avoid blunder Loo, Guo Hou Ismail, Hafiz Ismail, Muhammad Ishamuddin Md Ali, Nur Ayub Bin Abdul Rahman, Mohd Ramzisham Bin Haron, Hairulfaizi Ann Med Surg (Lond) Case Report The absence of a small portion of the pericardium is termed pericardial defect. This rare entity can be either acquired or congenital. The prevalence of congenital pericardial defect is exceedingly rare, which is approximately 0.002–0.004% of surgical and pathologic series. The most common type is the absence of the entire left side of pericardium, seen in 67% of all patients with a congenital pericardial defect. Other varieties are incredibly uncommon. Congenital pericardial defect has a male preponderance with a male to female ratio of 3:1, and familial occurrence is uncommon. We report a case of left partial congenital pericardial defect detected incidentally in a 22-year-old man who presented with recurrent left spontaneous pneumothorax. He underwent video-assisted thoracoscopic bullectomy and intraoperatively, we discovered a left partial pericardial defect which exposed the left atrial appendage. Although generally asymptomatic, patients may present with non-specific cardiac symptoms such as atypical chest pain. Partial pericardial defects have an increased risk of herniation of the whole left atrium, the left atrial appendage or the ventricles. If this occurs, cardiac strangulation may occur, leading to necrosis and sudden death. Cardiac MRI is a sensitive tool and will demonstrate the absence of preaortic pericardial recess. In conclusion, no surgical intervention is required in cases of congenital pericardial defect, unless the patient is symptomatic due to complications. If detected incidentally during cardiac or thoracic surgery, the best may be to leave it alone. Elsevier 2021-09-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8429913/ /pubmed/34527238 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2021.102806 Text en © 2021 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of IJS Publishing Group Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Case Report
Loo, Guo Hou
Ismail, Hafiz
Ismail, Muhammad Ishamuddin
Md Ali, Nur Ayub Bin
Abdul Rahman, Mohd Ramzisham Bin
Haron, Hairulfaizi
Incidental finding of congenital pericardial defect during vats bullectomy. Tips and tricks to avoid blunder
title Incidental finding of congenital pericardial defect during vats bullectomy. Tips and tricks to avoid blunder
title_full Incidental finding of congenital pericardial defect during vats bullectomy. Tips and tricks to avoid blunder
title_fullStr Incidental finding of congenital pericardial defect during vats bullectomy. Tips and tricks to avoid blunder
title_full_unstemmed Incidental finding of congenital pericardial defect during vats bullectomy. Tips and tricks to avoid blunder
title_short Incidental finding of congenital pericardial defect during vats bullectomy. Tips and tricks to avoid blunder
title_sort incidental finding of congenital pericardial defect during vats bullectomy. tips and tricks to avoid blunder
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8429913/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34527238
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2021.102806
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