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Journal Article
Review
Medical therapy of pericardial diseases: part I: idiopathic and infectious pericarditis.
Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine 2010 October
The treatment of pericardial diseases is largely empirical because of the relative lack of randomized trials compared with other cardiovascular diseases. The main forms of pericardial diseases that can be encountered in the clinical setting include acute and recurrent pericarditis, pericardial effusion with or without cardiac tamponade, and constrictive pericarditis. Medical treatment should be targeted at the cause of the disease as much as possible. However, the cause of pericardial diseases may be varied and depends on the prevalence of specific diseases (especially tuberculosis). The search for an etiology is often inconclusive, and most cases are classified as idiopathic in developed countries where tuberculosis is relatively rare, whereas a tuberculous etiology is often presumed in developing countries where tuberculosis is endemic. The aim of the present article is to review current medical therapy for pericardial diseases, highlighting recent significant advances in clinical research, ongoing challenges and unmet needs. Following a probabilistic approach, the most common causes are considered (idiopathic, viral, tuberculous, purulent, connective tissue diseases and neoplastic pericardial disease). In this article, the therapy of idiopathic and more common forms of infectious pericarditis (viral and bacterial) is reviewed.
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