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Fluid can collect inside the pericardium and
compress the heart when the kidneys do not properly remove waste
from the blood, when the pericardium swells from unknown causes,
from infection, or when the pericardium is damaged by cancer. Blunt
or penetrating injury from trauma to the chest or heart can also
result in cardiac tamponade when large amounts of blood fill the
pericardium. Tamponade can also occur during heart surgery.
When the heart is compressed by the surrounding
fluid, three conditions occur: a reduced amount of blood is pumped
to the body by the heart, the lower chambers of the ventricles are
filled with a less than normal amount of blood, and higher than
normal blood pressures occur inside the heart, caused by the
pressure of the fluid pushing in on the heart from the outside.
When tamponade occurs because of trauma, the
sound of the heart beats can become faint, and the blood pressure in
the arteries decreases, while the blood pressure in the veins
increases.
In cases of tamponade caused by more slowly
developing diseases, shortness of breath, a feeling of tightness in
the chest, increased blood pressure in the large veins in the neck (the
jugular veins), weight gain, and fluid retention by the body can
occur. |