Aggressive Cholesterol Pericarditis With Minimal Effusion Masquerading as Treatment-Refractory Autoimmune Disease.

Journal: CJC Open
Published:
Abstract

A middle-aged woman with rheumatoid arthritis presented with treatment-refractory pericarditis. Symptoms persisted despite escalation of immunosuppression, and she had recurrent admissions for heart failure. Imaging revealed minimal pericardial effusion and a thickened pericardium. Invasive hemodynamics confirmed constrictive physiology, and a pericardiectomy was required. Pathology testing confirmed cholesterol pericarditis, a rare condition of inflammatory cholesterol deposits within the pericardium. Previous reports describe moderate-to-large volumes of gold-coloured pericardial fluid. This case illustrates that cholesterol pericarditis can present with minimal pericardial effusion and rapidly progress to pericardial constriction.

Authors
Tahir Kafil, Elena Tugaleva, Muhammad Hashmi, Omar Shaikh, Yehia Fanous, Tahir Dahrouj, Maged Elrayes, Lin-rui Ray Guo, Rodrigo Bagur, Nikolaos Tzemos