OnlineMedEd: Surgery: Trauma - "Chest" Flashcards
Remember that rib fractures can lead to ________________.
penetrating chest wounds: hemothorax, pneumothorax
How do rib fractures lead to pneumonia?
It hurts to expand your chest when you have a rib fracture, so people will often not breathe as deeply. As such, atelectasis and pneumonia can result.
Rib fractures should be treated with _________________.
pain control (not binders!)
Describe the presentation of pneumothorax.
- Penetrating chest wound (or not in the case of spontaneous)
- Dyspnea
- Decreased breath sounds
- Hyperresonance on percussion
- Decreased tactile fremitus
What is it called when you use oxygen to treat a small spontaneous pneumothorax?
Nitrogen washout
The history of a tension pneumothorax will be similar to that of which other thoracic injury?
Hemothorax: both present with penetrating chest trauma or rib fracture as the cause
Describe the presentation of hemothorax.
- HPI: penetrating chest wound or rib fracture followed by dyspnea
- PE: decreased breath sounds, decreased tactile fremitus, dullness to percussion
- CXR: horizontal whiteout on the lower part of one lung
How is the thoracostomy in hemothorax different from pneumothorax?
Pneumo is second intercostal space, hemo is lower (because blood is dependent).
Patients with hemothorax need to go to the operating room if ______________.
their chest tube output is greater than 1500 mL on first draw or greater than 200 mL per hour
What is the treatment for a tension pneumothorax (aka sucking chest wound)?
- Occlusive dressing: place a dressing that is sealed on three of four sides over the wound. This prevents air from moving in on inhalation, but is open to let air out if any comes out during exhalation.
- Thoracostomy
In order to have flail chest, you need to have _______________.
two or more rib fractures in two or more places
Why does the free segment move paradoxically in flail chest?
The free rib segments are not tethered to the chest (except by muscle). They will thus pull in with inhalation because of negative intrathoracic pressure and push out with exhalation because of positive intrathoracic pressure –exactly the opposite of what the chest wall does.
The only rib fractures that require binders are ________________.
flail chest (because they need to be stabilized)
Flail chest and ______________ often occur with damage to underlying organs (i.e., the lungs), so you need to evaluate further for these.
scapular fracture
Pulmonary contusion usually presents after a _____________ and can be unilateral or bilateral.
massive trauma