Abstract
A 70-year-old man with advanced lung adenocarcinoma visited our hospital complaining of dyspnea. He was diagnosed with cardiac tamponade and underwent pericardial drainage. Pericardial effusion reaccumulated in 73 days, and right pericardial fenestration was performed. Although his respiratory condition worsened three weeks after the surgery, his chest X-ray showed little change. He died of respiratory failure the next day. Autopsy CT revealed heterogeneously reaccumulated pericardial effusion in the pericardial cavity, which was difficult to detect by frontal chest X-ray. An autopsy revealed adhesions around the fenestration site. Pericardial effusion may heterogeneously reaccumulate in the pericardial cavity due to adhesions. When the respiratory condition worsens even after fenestration for cardiac tamponade, lateral imaging, echocardiography, and chest CT should also be considered.