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Role of Biochemical Tests in the Diagnosis of Large Pericardial Effusions

Authors :
Doubell Af
Helmuth Reuter
Lesley J. Burgess
J.J. Frans Taljaard
Source :
Chest. 121:495-499
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2002.

Abstract

Study objectives: To determine the biochemical characteristics of large pericardial effusions in various disease states, and to assess their utility as diagnostic tools. Setting: An academic university hospital in the Western Cape, South Africa. Design: Consecutive, prospective case series. Patients: One hundred ten hospital patients > 12 years old, who presented to the echocardiography department with large pericardial effusions, and 12 control subjects who underwent open-heart surgery (coronary artery bypass graft or aortic valve replacement). Measurements: Fluid was sent for examination of biochemistry, adenosine deaminase, microbiology, hematology, and cytology. The etiology of each pericardial fluid sample was established using predetermined criteria. Results: The biochemistry of pericardial exudates differed significantly from pericardial transudates. Light’s criteria (whereby an exudate is defined as having one or more of the following: pleural fluid/serum protein ratio > 0.5; pleural fluid/serum lactate dehydrogenase [LDH] ratio > 0.6; and/or pleural fluid LDH level > 200 U/L) were applied to pericardial fluids and demonstrated to be the most reliable diagnostic tool for identifying pericardial exudates. The corresponding sensitivity was 98%. Conclusion: Although laboratory tests are a useful guideline when assessing the etiology and pathophysiology of pericardial effusions, the majority of large, clinically significant pericardial effusions result from exudative causes. (CHEST 2002; 121:495– 499)

Details

ISSN :
00123692
Volume :
121
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chest
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....45a3c08aa936eb1c8f75f2140eda1157