Pneumothorax Flashcards

1
Q

Pneumothorax : Definition

A

presence of air within the pleural cavity from a defect on the lung surface

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2
Q

Pneumothorax : Physiology

A
  • Parietal pleura is stuck onto the chest wall - which expands the chest cavity outwards
  • Visceral pleural is stuck onto the lungs - elastic recoil pulls the lung inwards
  • Opposing forces therefore creates ; negative pressure within the pleural space
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3
Q

Pneumothorax : Pathophysiology

A
  1. Trauma to the pleura - creates an opening in which air moves into the pleural space
    1. Negative pleural pressure is lost - thus there is no vacuum to hold the opposing forces together
    2. Lungs pull inwards and collapse
    3. Chest wall springs outwards
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4
Q

Pneumothorax : Spontaneous pneumothorax - Pathophysiology

A

Normally occurs due to -
- Damage to the alveoli creates a tiny leak and an air pocket forms called a bullae
- The bullae bursts and creates a large whole in the visceral pleura and enters the pleural space

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5
Q

Pneumothorax : Primary spontaneous pneumothorax

A
  • Absence of any underlying lung conditions
  • Typically : Thin, tall adolescent male - hx of high internal pressure due to holding his breath etc
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6
Q

Pneumothorax : Secondary sponatenous pneumothorax

A
  • Pneumothorax that occurs with a patient with underlying lung disease
    Such as hx of : Marian’s, CF, emphysema, etc
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7
Q

Pneumothorax : Traumatic pneumothorax

A

Pneumothorax develops due to damage to the pleura secondary to trauma such as stab wound etc.

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8
Q

Pneumothorax : Tension Pneumothorax

A
  • Damage to pleura creates a one - way valve
  • Air in able to enter into the pleural space but not leave
  • Thus pleural pressure begins to increase and inflate
    Increased pressure in mediastinum - Cardiorespiratory arrest
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9
Q

Tension Pneumothorax : Clinically features

A
  1. Hypoxic
  2. Tachycardia, and Hypotensive
  3. Distended neck veins
  4. Tracheal deviation away from the affected side.
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10
Q

Tension Pneumothorax : Management

A

1 . High flow oxygen
2 . Needle decompression
Large bore cannula inserted into the pleural cavity at
* 2nd intercostal space mid-clavicular line or 5th intercostal space mid-axillary line.
* Hiss confirms diagnosis

3 . Chest drain inserted

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11
Q

Pneumothorax : Clinical features

A

Sharp sudden chest pain - Pleuritic in nature
Dyspnea
Tachypnea - 2nd to reduced lung function
Dry, non productive cough

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12
Q

Pneumothorax : Clinical signs

A
  • Reduced chest sounds due to lung collapse
  • Hyper-resonance on chest percussion
  • Reduced chest expansion
  • Deviation of the trachea
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13
Q

Pneumothorax : CXR

A

CXR - determine size of the pneumothorax
Measure interpleural distance at the level of the hilum

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14
Q

Pneumothorax : Mx of assymptomatic patient

A

1 . Assess if patient is symptomatic
no significant pain or breathlessness and no physiological compromise

2 . No symptoms —> Conservative management

3 . Conservative management

1 . _Primary Spontaneous Pneumothorax_
* review every 2-4 days OP

2 . Secondary Spontaneous Pneumothorax
* Admit for inpatient monitoring

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15
Q

Pneumothorax : Mx of symptomatic patient

A

**1. Assess if patient is symptomatic
no significant pain or breathlessness and no physiological compromise

__Symptomatic patient__
1. Assess for high-risk characteristics
* Haemodynamic compromise - ?tension pneumothorax
* Haemothorax
* Bilateral Pneumothorax
* Underlying lung disease
* >50 years AND significant smoking history

2 . Is Pneumothorax a sufficient size
* >2cm laterally or Apically
No —> CT and reassess
Yes —> Consider next intervention

. _ High Risk characteristic present + AND Sufficient size _
* Chest drain

No High RISK characteristic + AND Sufficient size for intervention

  • What is the patient’s main priority?

1 . Procedure avoidance —> Conservative mx
2 . Rapid symptomatic relief
* —> Ambulatory device + r/v every 2-3 days OP

  • ——>Needle Aspiration —>

i). unresolved —> admit for Chest drain

ii). Resolved —> Discharge

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16
Q

Pneumothorax - Ambulatory device

A
  • catheter mounted on an 18G needle

MOA: one-way valve and vent to prevent air and fluid return to the pleural space while allowing for controlled escape of air and drainage of fluid

17
Q

Pneumothorax - Post discharge

A

Every patient presenting with pneumothorax
* _Outpatient review in 2-4 weeks if stable_

Discharge advice

  • Avoid smoking - risk is 10% vs 0.1% in non smokers
  • Fitness to fly } 2 weeks post chest drain or 1 week post X-ray check only
  • Permanently avoid scuba diving
18
Q

Management of Recurrent Pneumothorax

A
  1. Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS)
  • should be considered to allow for -mechanical/chemical pleurodesis +/- bullectomy.
  • Pleurodesis induces adhesions between layers of the pleura - eliminating potential spaces of air accumulation