Dressler syndrome is swelling and irritation of the sac around the heart that happens after damage to the heart muscle. The damage may trigger an immune system response that causes the condition. The damage can result from a heart attack, heart surgery or a serious injury.
Symptoms of Dressler syndrome include chest pain that can feel like chest pain from a heart attack.
Swelling and irritation of the sac around the heart is called pericarditis. Dressler syndrome is a type of pericarditis that can start after the heart muscle is damaged. So you may hear Dressler syndrome called post-traumatic pericarditis.
Some other names for the condition are:
Symptoms of Dressler syndrome are likely to start weeks to a few months after a heart attack, surgery or injury to the chest. Symptoms can include:
Get emergency care for sudden or ongoing chest pain. This can be a symptom of a heart attack or another serious condition.
Experts think Dressler syndrome is caused by the immune system's response to heart damage. The body reacts to the injured tissue by sending immune cells and proteins called antibodies to clean up and repair the affected area. Sometimes this response causes swelling due to the inflammation in the sac around the heart that's known as the pericardium.
Dressler syndrome can happen after a heart attack or some heart surgeries or procedures. It also can happen after a serious injury to the chest, such as trauma from a car accident.
Damage to the heart muscle increases the risk of Dressler syndrome. Some things that cause heart muscle are:
A complication of Dressler syndrome is fluid buildup in the tissues surrounding the lungs called pleural effusion.
Rarely, Dressler syndrome can cause more-serious complications, including:
Some studies suggest that taking the anti-inflammatory medicine colchicine (Colcrys, Gloperba, others) soon after heart surgery may help prevent Dressler syndrome.
Diagnosis of Dressler syndrome starts with a physical exam from your healthcare professional. The exams includes listening to the heart with a device called a stethoscope. A sound called a pericardial rub can happen when the pericardium is inflamed or when fluid has collected around the heart.
Tests that can help find out if you have Dressler syndrome include:
The goals of treatment for Dressler syndrome are to manage pain and lower the inflammation. Treatment may involve medicines. Surgery may be needed if complications happen.
The main treatment for Dressler syndrome is medicine to lower inflammation, including nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as:
If Dressler syndrome happens after a heart attack, usually aspirin is preferred over other NSAIDs.
Indomethacin also may be given.
If those medicines don't help, the next step might be corticosteroids. These can lower inflammation linked with Dressler syndrome by turning down the immune system.
Corticosteroids can have serious side effects. And they might interfere with the healing of damaged heart tissue after a heart attack or surgery. For those reasons, corticosteroids tend to be used only when other treatments don't work.
Other treatments may be needed to treat complications of Dressler syndrome. These include:
If you're being seen in the emergency room for chest pain, you might be asked: