Pericarditis – One-Liner Case Traps

Pericarditis – One-Liner Case Traps

  1. Diffuse concave ST elevation with PR depression but normal troponin → Acute pericarditis, not STEMI
  2. Troponin rise with preserved LV function in pericarditis → Myopericarditis
  3. Chest pain 48 hours after MI with diffuse ST elevation → Early post-MI pericarditis
  4. Fever, pericardial effusion 6 weeks post-MI → Dressler syndrome
  5. Post-MI pericarditis drug of choice → High-dose aspirin
  6. Diffuse ST elevation with reciprocal depression → Not pericarditis
  7. ST/T ratio in V6 >0.25 → Pericarditis over early repolarization
  8. Large painless pericardial effusion in CKD → Uremic pericarditis
  9. Hemorrhagic pericardial effusion → Malignancy until proven otherwise
  10. Raised JVP, hypotension, clear lungs → Cardiac tamponade
  11. Earliest echo sign of tamponade → RA systolic collapse
  12. Pulsus paradoxus >10 mmHg → Tamponade physiology
  13. Sudden hypotension in moderate effusion after cough → Acute tamponade
  14. Diuretics in tamponade → Worsens shock
  15. Persistent high JVP after pericardiocentesis → Effusive-constrictive pericarditis
  16. TB pericarditis with ascites and normal BNP → Constrictive pericarditis
  17. Kussmaul sign with normal LV systolic function → Constrictive pericarditis
  18. Elevated BNP favors → Restrictive cardiomyopathy, not constriction
  19. Definitive treatment of constrictive pericarditis → Pericardiectomy
  20. Septal bounce on echo → Constrictive physiology
  21. Recurrent chest pain after steroid taper → Steroid-dependent pericarditis
  22. Most important cytokine in recurrent pericarditis → IL-1
  23. Colchicine-resistant recurrent pericarditis → Anakinra indicated
  24. Early steroid use in viral pericarditis → Increases recurrence risk
  25. CRP elevated despite symptom resolution → Continue therapy
  26. CRP-guided taper prevents → Recurrence
  27. Exercise during acute pericarditis → Triggers relapse/myocarditis
  28. Pericarditis + AF started on anticoagulation → Risk of hemopericardium
  29. Sudden shock after anticoagulation → Hemorrhagic tamponade
  30. Mild troponin rise in pericarditis → Not indication for cath
  31. PR depression in aVR with PR elevation elsewhere → Pericarditis ECG pattern
  32. Absence of Q waves in ST elevation → Against STEMI
  33. Concave ST elevation in all leads → Pericarditis
  34. Pericardial LGE on CMR → Active inflammation
  35. Absence of LGE with thickened pericardium → Chronic constriction
  36. CT showing pericardial calcification → Chronic constrictive disease
  37. Low-voltage ECG with large effusion → Electrical alternans possible
  38. Electrical alternans → Large swinging effusion
  39. Tamponade with preserved BP → Compensated phase
  40. Narrow pulse pressure in tamponade → Reduced stroke volume
  41. Pericarditis in pregnancy safest drug → Aspirin (± colchicine selectively)
  42. Indomethacin in elderly CAD patient → Avoid
  43. HIV patient with pericarditis → TB or malignancy likely
  44. Rapidly accumulating small effusion → More dangerous than large slow effusion
  45. Fever >38°C in pericarditis → High-risk etiology
  46. Subacute presentation weeks → TB or autoimmune
  47. Normal echo but classic pain + ECG → Still pericarditis
  48. Myocarditis vs myopericarditis key difference → LV dysfunction
  49. Normal BNP in severe right heart failure → Think constriction
  50. NSAID + colchicine failure + steroid dependence → IL-1 blockade

Pericarditis – 50 Ultra-Hard FAQs (NEET-SS)

1.

Why does PR depression occur in acute pericarditis but not in STEMI?
Answer: Due to atrial epicardial injury causing atrial current of injury; STEMI spares atrial myocardium.


2.

Which ECG lead is most sensitive for early pericarditis?
Answer: Lead II and lateral precordial leads for PR depression.


3.

Why is ST elevation in pericarditis concave upward?
Answer: Due to diffuse subepicardial inflammation rather than transmural ischemia.


4.

What ECG feature best differentiates pericarditis from early repolarization?
Answer: Presence of PR depression and ST/T ratio >0.25 in V6.


5.

Why are troponins elevated in myopericarditis but prognosis remains good?
Answer: Injury is superficial, patchy, and non-necrotic.


6.

Which imaging modality best detects active pericardial inflammation?
Answer: CMR with T2 edema and late gadolinium enhancement.


7.

Why is CRP preferred over ESR for monitoring treatment response?
Answer: CRP correlates better with ongoing inflammation and recurrence risk.


8.

What is the strongest predictor of recurrent pericarditis?
Answer: Early corticosteroid use.


9.

Why should steroids be avoided as first-line therapy?
Answer: They suppress viral clearance and increase recurrence.


10.

What colchicine dose adjustment is required in renal dysfunction?
Answer: Reduce dose by 50% if eGFR <30 mL/min.


11.

Why is colchicine contraindicated with clarithromycin?
Answer: CYP3A4 inhibition → fatal colchicine toxicity.


12.

Why is aspirin preferred over NSAIDs post-MI pericarditis?
Answer: NSAIDs impair myocardial healing; aspirin does not.


13.

What defines incessant pericarditis?
Answer: Symptoms persisting >4 weeks but <3 months without remission.


14.

Why is exercise restriction mandatory in acute pericarditis?
Answer: Physical stress increases inflammatory cytokines and recurrence.


15.

Which pericarditis etiology mandates immediate pericardiocentesis?
Answer: Purulent (bacterial) pericarditis.


16.

Why is TB pericarditis associated with high constriction risk?
Answer: Granulomatous fibrosis causes pericardial thickening and calcification.


17.

Which finding best predicts progression to constrictive pericarditis?
Answer: Persistent pericardial LGE on CMR.


18.

Why can BNP be normal in constrictive pericarditis?
Answer: Myocardial stretch is limited by rigid pericardium.


19.

What echocardiographic sign indicates effusive-constrictive pericarditis?
Answer: Persistently elevated JVP after pericardiocentesis.


20.

Why is pulsus paradoxus absent in chronic constriction?
Answer: Fixed intrapericardial constraint prevents respiratory variation.


21.

Which echo Doppler parameter is most specific for constriction?
Answer: Respiratory variation in mitral inflow >25%.


22.

Why does hepatic vein diastolic flow reversal occur in constriction?
Answer: Enhanced ventricular interdependence during expiration.


23.

Why is CT superior to echo for pericardial calcification?
Answer: High spatial resolution for calcium detection.


24.

Which drug class is emerging for steroid-dependent recurrent pericarditis?
Answer: IL-1 inhibitors (Anakinra, Rilonacept).


25.

What trial established colchicine benefit in first-episode pericarditis?
Answer: ICAP trial.


26.

Why is Rilonacept superior to steroids in recurrence prevention?
Answer: Targets IL-1–mediated autoinflammatory pathway.


27.

Which pericarditis subtype is most likely autoimmune?
Answer: Recurrent idiopathic pericarditis.


28.

Why is pericardial biopsy rarely diagnostic?
Answer: Low yield unless malignancy or TB suspected.


29.

Which malignancy most commonly causes pericardial effusion?
Answer: Lung cancer.


30.

Why does hypothyroidism cause large effusions without tamponade?
Answer: Slow accumulation allows pericardial stretch.


31.

Which effusion is classically hemorrhagic?
Answer: Malignancy or tuberculosis.


32.

Why is Beck’s triad unreliable in subacute tamponade?
Answer: Compensatory mechanisms blunt classic signs.


33.

What echo sign indicates early tamponade?
Answer: Right atrial systolic collapse.


34.

Why does tamponade equalize diastolic pressures?
Answer: Uniform pericardial pressure limits chamber filling.


35.

Which pericarditis requires mandatory hospitalization?
Answer: Fever >38°C, large effusion, immunosuppression, trauma, or myopericarditis.


36.

Why are anticoagulants avoided in acute pericarditis?
Answer: Risk of hemorrhagic effusion.


37.

What differentiates myopericarditis from perimyocarditis?
Answer: Predominant pericardial vs myocardial involvement.


38.

Which viral cause is linked with severe myocarditis overlap?
Answer: Coxsackie B virus.


39.

Why is pericardial knock absent in effusion?
Answer: Fluid dampens sudden cessation of ventricular filling.


40.

What is Dressler syndrome mediated by?
Answer: Autoimmune response to myocardial antigens.


41.

Why does Dressler occur weeks after MI?
Answer: Time required for antibody formation.


42.

Which lab abnormality suggests bacterial pericarditis?
Answer: Very high procalcitonin.


43.

Why is NSAID failure a red flag?
Answer: Suggests non-viral etiology.


44.

Which echo view best detects posterior effusion?
Answer: Parasternal long-axis.


45.

Why does constriction show discordant LV/RV pressure changes?
Answer: Ventricular interdependence with fixed total volume.


46.

What hemodynamic feature distinguishes constriction from restrictive cardiomyopathy?
Answer: Respiratory variation in ventricular filling.


47.

Why is pericardiectomy delayed in active inflammation?
Answer: High surgical mortality and poor outcomes.


48.

Which drug reduces recurrence duration but not mortality?
Answer: Colchicine.


49.

Why is low-dose steroid preferred if unavoidable?
Answer: Reduces rebound inflammation.


50.

What is the single most exam-relevant concept in pericarditis?
Answer: Differentiation from STEMI using ECG + clinical context.


Pericarditis – 50 Ultra-Hard FAQs
Pericarditis – 50 Ultra-Hard FAQs
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