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A 55-year-old man presented with progressive distension of the abdomen, pedal oedema, effort dyspnoea and excessive fatigue. Physical examination showed facial puffiness, distended neck veins with prominent Y descent in jugular venous pressure, ascites, systolic retraction of the chest wall and a loud pericardial knock. Echocardiography showed greatly thickened pericardium (figure 1A) with features of constrictive pericarditis. Thick pericardium was seen by MRI, with 20 mm thickness lateral to the left ventricle (figure 1B). Cardiac catheterisation disclosed prominent Y descent in right atrial tracing with no respiratory variation of the mean right atrial pressure (figure 1C). There was elevation and equalisation of right and left ventricular end diastolic pressures, prominent rapid filling wave and ventricular interdependence (figure 1D). Pericardiectomy was carried out through midline sternotomy, and histopathology showed caseating granuloma consistent with tuberculosis (figure 1E), which is still the leading cause of constrictive pericarditis in developing countries.1 The patient improved well after the surgery and antituberculous treatment.
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Footnotes
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Contributors All the authors made a substantial contribution to the concept, design and drafting of the article. The manuscript was read and approved by all the authors.
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Competing interests None.
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Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; internally peer reviewed.