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Diagnosis of malignant pericarditis: a single centre experience.
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References
2012
Year
1. Malignancy was found in 58% of patients undergoing invasive treatment due to large pericardial effusion. 2. Cytological examination of the pericardial fluid and histological examination of a pericardial specimen showed high specificity (100%) but low sensitivity (46%) in the diagnosis of malignant pericarditis. 3. The most important predictors of malignant pericarditis included tachycardia of >100 bpm as revealed by the physical examination and ECG, echocardiographic evidence of cardiac tamponade, presence of enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes (>1 cm) and thickened pericardium (>8 mm) by chest CT, bloody pericardial effusion, and elevated levels of CEA (>5 ng/mL) and CYFRA 21-1 (>50 ng/mL) in the pericardial fluid.
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