Because it has a hole through out pericardium as shown at the image.Why would the pericardium be ruptured?
Because it has a hole through out pericardium as shown at the image.
Because it has a hole through out pericardium as shown at the image.
Thank you...it is "in" the ventricular free wall. Thank you so muchNo, the hole is in the ventricular free wall. As said above, the pericardium is a sac surrounding the heart, and is not involved.
Thank you so much.Yeah but what if the pericardium then pops like a balloon. That would be the end of the tamponade and solve all the problems.
Thank you so much!Pericardium is another sac that's not shown in the picture. You need to open your anatomy book and think of these vocabularies in layers. Honestly, the concept isn't hard. It's the thought that the pericardium is another sac that escapes people mind and makes cardiology complicated.
Thank you so much!For demonstration.
Free wall rupture does not cause pericardial rupture so you wouldn't have intrathoracic free fluid. The fluid will be contained within the pericardium causing near immediate tamponade. Tamponade is all about the rate of fluid accumulation and not amount.
Thank you so muchAgreed, there's no reason to think that the pericardium would rupture as a result of an MI. With the caveat that this is definitely not my specialty, it seems like the major blood supply to the pericardium is via the pericardiophrenic artery, a branch of the internal thoracic artery. Coronary arteries have a minor contribution, if at all.
Thank you so much.
Yeah but what if the pericardium then pops like a balloon. That would be the end of the tamponade and solve all the problems.
Some people pop it on purpose. 😉
Seems a bit aggressive coming from a hospice and palliative care doc. 😛Patient crashes, then time to open the chest.
Seems a bit aggressive coming from a hospice and palliative care doc. 😛