Description
COURT CASE:
- being at risk for developing pericarditis because we had a high dose radiation to our chest
- being at risk for developing pericarditis because we have hypersensitivity and/or an autoimmune disease
- being at risk for developing pericarditis because we had acute rheumatic fever
- being at risk for developing pericarditis because we had systemic lupus erythematosus
- being at risk for developing pericarditis because we had rheumatoid arthritis
- being at risk for developing pericarditis because we had neoplasms (an abnormal growth of tissue in our body)primary or metastasis from lungs, breasts, or other organs
- being at risk for developing pericarditis because we had a postcardiac injury-such as having Myocardial infarction (heart attack)
- being at risk for developing pericarditis because we had trauma or surgery that leaves the pericardium intact but causes blood to leak into the pericardial cavity
- being at risk for developing pericarditis because we had uremia (a raised level in the blood of urea and other nitrogenous waste compounds)
- pericarditis
- the inflammation of our pericardium
- our pericardial sac being inflamed
- pericardial friction rub (grating sound heard as the heart moves)
- pain
- inflammation
- elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR)
- slightly elevated cardiac enzyme levels-especially if we also have myocarditis
- decreased cardiac output
- acute pericarditis
- an acute inflammation of our pericardium
- purulent (has pus), serous (producing serum), or hemorrhagic exudate (having a fluid that leaks out of blood vessels into nearby tissues)
- acute pain
- sharp pain
- sudden pain
- pleuritic pain
- sharp pain that starts over the sternum and radiates to the neck, back, and arms
- sharp pain that increases with deep inspiration (painful when breathing in)
- sharp pain that increases when we take deep breaths, cough, and/or swallow
- sharp pain that gets worse when we are in a supine position
- sharp pain that decreases when we sit up and lean forward
- pallor (having a pale appearance)
- clammy skin
- hypotension
- fevers
- chills
- fatigue
- malaise
- elevated white blood cell count
- pulsus paradoxus
- neck vein distension
- dyspnea (difficult or labored breathing)
- orthopnea (feeling breathless when lying down flat)
- tachycardia (fast heart rate)
- ill defined substernal chest pain
- feeling of fullness in the chest
- chronic pericarditis
- a chronic inflammation of our pericardium
- having a chronic inflammation of our pericardium that eventually leads to a chronic inflammatory thickening of our pericardium
- dense pericardial thickening
- pericardial friction rub
- right ventricular failure
- fluid retention
- ascites (abdominal swelling caused by fluid retention)
- hepatomegaly (enlarged liver)
- infectious pericarditis
- being at risk for having infectious pericarditis because we had a bacterial, fungal, and/or viral infection
- elevated white blood cell count (sign of an infection)
- bacterial pericarditis
- fungal pericarditis
- having Dressler’s syndrome
- losing pericardial elasticity
- having an accumulation of fluid within our perdicardial sac
- heart failure
- cardiac tamponade
- fear
- worry
- stress
- anxiety
- nervousness
- having accusations, false labels, false verdicts, generational false verdicts, and/or word curses that we have any of these aforementioned problems
- having a diagnosis and/or a prognosis that we have any of these aforementioned problems
- the buying, selling, and/or trading of our perdicardium and/or pericardial sac to the kingdom of darkness
- the kingdom of darkness having ownership claims over our perdicardium and/or pericardial sac
- the category/kingdom of spirits that cause, contribute to, exacerbate, and/or reestablish any of these aforementioned problems