Current Drug Treatment for Acute and Recurrent Pericarditis
Abstract Pericarditis is the most frequent pericardial disease and presents with a relatively benign course when treated according to guideline-directed therapies at first presentation. Recurrence is the most frequent complication and may occur more frequently after a first episode, in patients with autoimmune etiology, in patients who received glucocorticoids, or after rapid (i.e., within 1 month) tapering of anti-inflammatory drugs. The therapeutic armamentarium for pericarditis includes high-dose nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) that are tapered rapidly once symptoms are controlled. Colchicine
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