Pneumothorax Flashcards
1
Q
How can you recognise tension pneumothorax?
A
Pneumothorax with: • Severe respiratory distress • Tracheal deviation to contralateral side • Distended neck veins ( JVP) • Hypotension
Do not perform CXR.
Needs immediate treatment.
2
Q
Causes of pneumothorax
A
- traumatic: penetrating or non-penetrating chest injuries
- iatrogenic (central venous catheter, thoracentesis, mechanical ventilation with barotrauma)
- spontaneous (no history of trauma)
Primary:
· spontaneous rupture of apical subpleural bleb of lung into pleural space
· predominantly tall, healthy, young males
Secondary:
· rupture of subpleural bleb which migrates along bronchioalveolar sheath to the mediastinum then to the intrapleural space
· necrosis of lung tissue adjacent to pleural surface (e.g. pneumonia, abscess, PCP, lung CA, emphysema)
3
Q
Px of pneumothorax
A
- can be asymptomatic
- acute-onset pleuritic chest pain, dyspnea
- tachypnea, tachycardia
- tracheal deviation (contralateral deviation in tension pneumothorax)
- ipsilateral diminished chest expansion
- decreased tactile/vocal fremitus
- hyperresonance
- ipsilateral diminished breath sounds
4
Q
Ix of Pneumothorax & what will you see in small & large pneumothorax?
A
• CXR
- small: separation of visceral and parietal pleura seen as fine crescentic line parallel to chest wall at apex - large: increased density and decreased volume of lung on side of pneumothorax
5
Q
Rx of pneumothorax
A
• small pneumothoraces (