Ventricular Pericardial Friction Rub
What is Ventricular pericardial friction rub?
A ventricular pericardial friction rub (often simply called a pericardial friction rub) is an abnormal, gritty or squeaky sound heard over the heart with a stethoscope. It is created when the inflamed inner layers of the pericardium â the thin, doubleâwalled sac that surrounds the heart â rub against each other during the cardiac cycle. The term âventricularâ is used when the rub is most prominent over the left ventricle, typically heard at the lower left sternal border.
Pericardial friction rubs are not a disease themselves; they are a clinical sign that the pericardium is inflamed (pericarditis). The sound can be âtriphasicâ (heard during systole, early diastole, and late diastole) or âbiphasicâ (systole and diastole). Because the rub is often louder when the patient leans forward and holds breath, physicians use positioning to help identify it.
Common Causes
Inflammation of the pericardium may arise from many sources. The most frequent triggers of a pericardial friction rub include:
- Viral pericarditis â Coxsackie B, adenovirus, influenza, COVIDâ19
- Bacterial infection â Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, tuberculosis
- Postâmyocardial infarction (Dressler) syndrome â autoimmune reaction weeks after a heart attack
- Autoimmune diseases â systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, scleroderma
- Uremia â advanced kidney failure leading to toxin accumulation
- Chest trauma â blunt or penetrating injury to the chest wall
- Radiation therapy â especially when the mediastinum is treated for cancer
- Postâcardiac surgery â early postoperative inflammation
- Neoplastic infiltration â metastases from lung, breast, or lymphoma involving the pericardium
- Idiopathic â no identifiable cause; accounts for ~20âŻ% of cases
Associated Symptoms
While the friction rub itself is a sound, most patients experience other symptoms that point to pericardial inflammation:
- Chest pain â sharp, stabbing, often worsens when lying flat and improves when sitting up or leaning forward.
- Fever â lowâgrade fever common with infectious causes.
- Dyspnea (shortness of breath) â especially when the pericardial inflammation leads to fluid accumulation (pericardial effusion).
- Palpitations â irregular heartbeat sensation.
- Fatigue â systemic inflammation can cause generalized tiredness.
- Swelling of the ankles or abdomen â may indicate developing cardiac tamponade.
- Syncope or nearâsyncope â rare, but can happen if tamponade or severe inflammation impairs cardiac output.
When to See a Doctor
Because a pericardial friction rub signals inflammation that can progress to serious complications, prompt evaluation is essential. Seek medical care if you notice:
- New, sharp chest pain that changes with position.
- Fever or chills accompanying chest discomfort.
- Shortness of breath that is worsening or occurs at rest.
- Rapid heartbeat (tachycardia) or irregular rhythm.
- Swelling of the legs, abdomen, or neck veins.
- Fainting, dizziness, or feeling lightâheaded.
- A known recent heart attack, chest trauma, or recent cardiac surgery.
Even if the pain seems mild, a healthcare professional should listen for a friction rub and determine if further testing is needed.
Diagnosis
Evaluation of a suspected pericardial friction rub involves a combination of history, physical exam, and targeted investigations.
1. Physical Examination
- Careful auscultation with a stethoscope over the left lower sternal border while the patient sits up, leans forward, and holds breath.
- Assessment for pulsus paradoxus (a >10âŻmmHg drop in systolic BP during inspiration) â a sign of tamponade.
2. Electrocardiogram (ECG)
- Diffuse STâsegment elevation and PRâsegment depression are classic for acute pericarditis.
- Localized changes could suggest myocardial infarction rather than isolated pericarditis.
3. Imaging
- Echocardiography â firstâline test to detect pericardial effusion, assess hemodynamic impact, and rule out tamponade.
- Chest Xâray â may show an enlarged cardiac silhouette if fluid accumulates.
- Cardiac MRI or CT â useful for identifying pericardial thickening, inflammation, or neoplastic involvement when the diagnosis is unclear.
4. Laboratory Tests
- Complete blood count (CBC) â leukocytosis points to infection.
- Inflammatory markers (CRP, ESR) â usually elevated.
- Cardiac enzymes (troponin) â may be mildly raised if there is concurrent myocarditis.
- Serology for viral agents (e.g., Coxsackie, COVIDâ19) or autoimmune panels when indicated.
- Renal function tests â to assess uremic contribution.
5. Pericardial Fluid Analysis (rare)
If a large effusion is present and the cause is uncertain, pericardiocentesis allows sampling for bacterial culture, cytology, or biochemical studies.
Treatment Options
Treatment aims to relieve pain, reduce inflammation, and prevent complications such as cardiac tamponade.
1. AntiâInflammatory Medications
- NSAIDs (ibuprofen 600â800âŻmgâŻevery 6â8âŻh or aspirin 750â1000âŻmgâŻevery 6âŻh) are firstâline for most acute pericarditis cases.
- Colchicine 0.5â1âŻmg daily for 3âŻmonths reduces recurrence risk (supported by the COPE trial).
- In patients with contraindications to NSAIDs (e.g., renal impairment, GI ulceration), corticosteroids (prednisone 0.2â0.5âŻmg/kg) may be used, although they carry a higher recurrence rate.
2. Treating the Underlying Cause
- Antibiotics for bacterial pericarditis (e.g., ceftriaxone plus vancomycin pending cultures).
- Antitubercular therapy for TB pericarditis.
- Dialysis optimization for uremic pericarditis.
- Immunosuppressive agents (hydroxychloroquine, azathioprine) for autoimmune pericarditis.
- Management of postâmyocardial infarction pericarditis with NSAIDs and careful monitoring for Dressler syndrome.
3. Procedures
- Pericardiocentesis â urgent removal of fluid if tamponade develops.
- Pericardial window or subxiphoid pericardiostomy â surgical drainage for recurrent or loculated effusions.
4. Supportive & Home Care
- Rest and avoidance of strenuous activity for at least 1â2âŻweeks.
- Elevate the head of the bed to reduce discomfort.
- Use of lowâdose acetaminophen for breakthrough pain if NSAIDs are limited.
- Stay hydrated, but avoid excess fluid overload if renal function is compromised.
Prevention Tips
- Vaccinate against common viral agents (influenza, COVIDâ19, hepatitis B) that can trigger pericarditis.
- Promptly treat respiratory infections to reduce spread to the pericardium.
- Maintain good oral hygiene and dental care; streptococcal infections can seed the pericardium.
- Control chronic conditions â keep blood pressure, diabetes, and kidney disease wellâmanaged.
- Avoid excessive alcohol and illicit drug use, both of which increase the risk of viral infections and cardiomyopathy.
- If you have an autoimmune disease, adhere to prescribed immunomodulatory therapy and regular rheumatology followâup.
- After cardiac surgery or intervention, follow postoperative instructions and attend all scheduled followâup visits.
Emergency Warning Signs
- Sudden, severe chest pain that does not improve with sitting up or taking medication.
- Rapid, weak pulse or a noticeable drop in blood pressure (feeling faint or lightâheaded).
- Shortness of breath that worsens rapidly or occurs at rest.
- Swelling of the neck veins, face, or abdomen suggesting fluid buildup around the heart.
- Loss of consciousness or nearâsyncope.
- New heart murmurs or a âwhooshingâ sound (thrill) over the chest.
Key Takeâaways
A ventricular pericardial friction rub is a valuable clinical clue that the pericardium is inflamed. While many cases stem from viral infections and resolve with antiâinflammatory therapy, the condition can progress to effusion, tamponade, or chronic constrictive pericarditis if left untreated. Early recognition, appropriate investigations, and targeted treatment dramatically improve outcomes. If you notice the characteristic chest pain or any of the emergency warning signs listed above, seek medical attention without delay.
References:
- Mayo Clinic. Pericarditis: Symptoms & Causes. 2023.
- American Heart Association. Pericarditis. 2022. Â
- Cox, D. et al. âColchicine for Acute Pericarditis: Systematic Review and Metaâanalysis.â Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 2021.
- World Health Organization. Pericarditis Fact Sheet. 2022.
- National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). Uremic Pericarditis. 2023.