Thoracic Trauma Flashcards
True or false: Most life threatening thoracic injuries can be treated with airway control or decompression of the chest with a needle, finger or tube.
True!
What are clinical signs and symptoms of tracheobronchial tree injury?
- Hemoptysis
- Cervical subcuteneous emphysema
- Tension pneumothorax
- Cyaynosis
- Incomplete expansion of the lung and continued large air leak after placement of a chest tube
What is the most common cause of tension pneumothorax?
-other causes?
Most common cause of tension pneumothorax = mechanical positive pressure ventilation in patients with visceral pleural injury
Other causes:
- Penetrating or blunt chest trauma in which a parenchymal lung injury fails to seal
- Iatrogenic from subclavian or IJ venous catheter insertion
- Traumatic defects in the chest wall that have occlusive dressings placed on them or the defect itself has a flap-valve mechanism
- Markedly displaced thoracic spine fractures (rare)
Fill in the blank: Patients with tension pneumothorax who are spontaneously breathing often manifest ____ and ____ whereas patients who are mechanically ventilated manifest ____
Spontaneously breathing: manifest air hunger and extreme tachypnea
Mechanically ventilated: manifest hemodynamic collapse
What is the ideal length of needle for needle decompression in tension pneumothorax?
-what is the recent evidence for placement of needle for needle decompression?
5 cm over the needle catheter will reach the pleural space >50% of the time whereas an 8 cm over the needle catheter will reach the pleural space > 90% of the time
-recent evidence supports placing the large needle at the fifth interspace slightly anterior to the midaxillary line
True or false: Tube thoracostomy is mandatory after needle or finger decompression of the chest.
True
You attempt needle decompression with no success of treating a tension pneumothorax. What is your next move?
Finger decompression may be necessary as you prepare to insert a chest tube
What is an open pneumothorax?
Large injuries to the chest wall that remain open can result in an open pneumothorax - equilibration between intrathoracic pessure and atmospheric pressure is immediate
-since air follows the path of least resistance, when the opening of the chest wall is approximately 2/3s the diameter of the trachea or greater, air passes preferentially through the chest wall defect with each inspiration
How do you manage an open pneumothorax?
Promptly close the defect with a sterile dressing large enough to overlap the wound’s edges
- tape it securely with occlusive dressing ONLY on three sides to provide a flutter valve effect
- as the patient breathes in, the dressing occludes the wound so air cannot enter the chest wall. As the patient breathes out, the open end of the dressing allows air to escape from the pleural space
- ***DO NOT TAPE ALL 4 EDGES OF THE DRESSING DOWN OR YOU MIGHT WORSEN THE PNEUMOTHORAX BY ALLOWING AIR TO ACCUMULATE IN THE THORACIC CAVITY UNLESS A CHEST TUBE IS PLACED
- definitive management: place chest tube remove from the wound as soon as possible and get surgical closure of the wound
You have a trauma patient presenting with PEA. What are the three most common causes? (4)
- Tension pneumothorax
- Cardiac tamponade
- Profound hypovolema
- Blunt cardiac injury with resulting blunt rupture of the atria or ventricles
Other causes:
- Hypoxia
- Hypovolemia
- Hydrogen ion (acidosis)
- Hypothermia
- Toxins
- Thrombosis
What are the Hs and Ts of PEA/asystole?
- Hydrogen Ion
- Hyperkalemia
- Hypoxia
- Hypothermia
- Hypovolemia
- Toxins
- Tamponade
- Tension pneumothorax
- Thrombosis
What is the definition of a massive hemothorax?
-most common cause?
Rapid accumulation of > 1500 ml of blood or 1/3 or more of patient’s blood volume in the chest cavity
-most commonly caused by a penetrating injury that disrupts the systemic or hilar vessels but can also result from blunt trauma
What is the management of a massive hemothorax?
- Restore blood volume
- Decompress the chest cavity with a chest tube
**When appropriate, blood from chest tube can be collected in a device suitable for autotransfusion
What chest tube output is an indication for urgent thoractomy?
-what if there is continued blood loss: what rate of blood loss is an indication for thoractomy?
Immediate return of 1500 ml of blood or more in the chest tube
- basically if they meet criteria for a massive hemothorax!!!
- patients who have an initial output of < 1500 ml but continue to bleed may also require thoractomy
- base this decision on the rate of continuing blood loss (200 ml/hr x 2-4 hours) in addition to patient’s hemodynamic status
- persistent need for blood transfusion in an indication for thoracotomy
Name 3 indications for urgent chest thoracotomy in a hemothorax.
- Initial blood loss of 1500 ml or more through a chest tube
- Initial blood loss < 1500 ml but continuous blood loss at a rate of > 200 ml x 2-4 hours
- Persistent need for blood transfusion
What anatomical location should you be most concerned about in penetrating thoracic trauma that would indicate a need for thoractomy most likely?
A penetrating thoracic injury in the mediastinal box: penetrating anterior chest wounds medial to the nipple line and posterior wounds medial to the scapula
-high potential for damage to the great vessels, hilar structures, heart with associated potential for cardiac tamponade
What is Kussmaul’s sign?
A rise in venous pressure with inspiration when breathing spontaneously - indicates cardiac tamponade or tension pneumothorax
On clinical exam, what is the easiest way to differentiate between cardiac tamponade and tension pneumothorax since both can give shock and distended neck veins?
Tension pneumothorax: unilateral decreased breath sounds and hyperresonance on percussion of affected side
Cardiac tamponade: presence of bilateral breath sounds