Cardiac tamponade is a well-recognized early complication (ie, within 15 days) of cardiac surgery usually a result of the development of a pericardial effusion postoperatively. However, left ventricular diastolic collapse as a result of the presence of a large pleural effusion, but in the absence of any pericardial effusion, is rare, particularly late (ie, after 15 days) after cardiac surgery. We present the echocardiographic findings of a man presenting with recurrent exertional breathlessness, after elective tissue aortic valve replacement, and demonstrate, by echocardiography, the mechanism of left ventricular diastolic collapse and late regional cardiac tamponade, after cardiac surgery, as a result of the effects of a large pleural effusion but in the absence of any pericardial effusion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcute aortic dissection is an important differential diagnosis to exclude in the emergency presentation of patients with acute chest pain. Misdiagnosis can be fatal if treatment with antithrombotic agents (for presumed acute coronary syndrome) is administered. We present a series of two patients who presented to our center with acute DeBakey Type III (or Stanford Type B) aortic dissection where transthoracic echocardiography was useful in making the diagnosis, which was later confirmed by computed tomography contrast angiography of the aorta.
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