Benign Pleural Disease Flashcards

1
Q

MCC of spontaneous pneumothorax

A

ruptured apical subpleural bleb

  • MC in males (6:1 ratio)
  • Other conditions predisposing to spontaneous ptx:
    • cystic fibrosis
    • COPD
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2
Q

T/F

Tension pneumothorax common after spontaneous ptx

A

False:

tension pneumothorax rare as collapsed segmetn usually closes off leak

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3
Q

Rare causes of secondary ptx

A
  • catamenial ptx (d/t pleural endometriosis)
  • lymphangiomatosis
    • proliferation of spindle cells along bronchioles resulting in air trapping and thin walled cysts
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4
Q

Appearance of minimal and moderate ptx on CXR

A
  • Minimal
    • rim of air surrounds lung
  • Moderate
    • lung is collapsed half way to heart boarder
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5
Q

Early treatment options for spontaneous ptx

A
  • Observation
  • Aspiration
  • Tube thoracostomy (water seal or Heimlich valve)
  • Percutaneous thoracostomy
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6
Q

Indications for operative intervention of spontaneous ptx

A
  • Persistent air leak >= 1 week
  • Second recurrence
  • Patients with only 1 lung
  • High risk patients for recurrence where recurrence is dangerous
    • Piolets
    • Divers
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7
Q

Chance of recurrence after resoluation of primary spontaneous ptx

A

20-50%

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8
Q

Surgical interventions for spontaneous ptx

A
  • VATS blebectomy
    • Some groups advocate apical resection (even in absence of blebs)
  • Talc or doxycycline pleurodesis (VATS vs. open)
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9
Q

Complications of talc or doxycycline pleurodesis

A
  • Fever
  • Pleuritic chest pain (more common with doxycycline)
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10
Q

Best treatment for fibrothorax

A

Prevention

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11
Q

MCC of fibrothorax

A

Failure to recognize and treat hemothorax, empyema or large pleural effusions

*Regardless of effusion character, resultant inflammatory response eventually leads to dense, avascular collagen matrix

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12
Q

Dx characteristics of fibrothorax

A
  • PE:
    • collapsed intercostal spaces (decreased thorax size)
  • CXR:
    • radiodensities in dependent portions of chest
  • PFTs:
    • restrictive ventilatory defect
    • reduced TLC, VC, FEV1
    • normal DLCO
  • Maybe confused with mesothelioma of malignant process of pleura (r/o with VATS pleural biopsy before definitive treatment)
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13
Q

Surgical treatment of fibrothorax

A

Decortication

  • Three main steps
    • Blunt dissection of the parietal peel
      • Plane between endothoracic fascia and parietal pleura
    • Pleural cavity entered and fluid/debris evacuated
    • Visceral pleua is dissected
      • Plane between visceral pleura and fibrous peel
  • Avoid injury to phrenic nerve
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14
Q

Definition of emypema

A

Pleural effusion with positive bacteriologic cultures

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15
Q

Pleral fluid characteristics of empyema

A
  • pH < 7
  • glucose < 50 mg/dL
  • LDH > 1000 IU/L
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16
Q

Etiology of empyema

A
  • PNA
  • Trauma
  • Instrumentation
  • Spread from other sites of infection
  • BPF
    • can either be an etiology or complicaton of empyema
17
Q

3 stages of empyema

A
  1. Stage I: parapneumonic effusion (exudative)
  2. Stage II: fibrinopurulent phase (includes bacteria invasion)
  3. Stage III: chronic phase (organizing phase)
    1. includes in-growth of fibroblasts and capillaries
18
Q

MC organisms responsible for empyema

A
  • S. aureus
  • GN bacteria
  • Anaerobes

50% polymicrobial

19
Q

Surgical TOC for empyema

A
  • Prompt drainage
    • often tube thoracostomy insufficient (requires VATS or open drainage)
  • Full lung re-expansion (to close off potential space where infection can collect)
  • Decortication
    • chronic empyema with entrapped lung
20
Q

Often requires open pleural drainage procedure (Clagett window or Eloesser flap)

A

BPF or severe empyema

21
Q

Priniples of Clagett window or Eloessar flap drainage

A
  • Continued drainage
  • Irrigation
  • Frequent dressing changes
  • Eloessar flap considered more permanent because skin is sutured to pleura to epithelialize tract
22
Q

Alternative option to obliterate space lost to infection during surgical treatment of empyema

A

Muscle flap coverage (latissimus most common)