Thoracic Emergencies




© Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
Abe Fingerhut, Ari Leppäniemi, Raul Coimbra, Andrew B. Peitzman, Thomas M. Scalea and Eric J. Voiglio (eds.)Emergency Surgery Course (ESC®) Manual10.1007/978-3-319-21338-5_26


26. Thoracic Emergencies



François Pons  and Federico Gonzalez 


(1)
Department of General and Thoracic Surgery, French Military Health Service Academy Ecole du Val de Grace, Paris, France

(2)
Department of General and Thoracic Surgery, Percy Military Hospital, Clamart, France

 



 

François Pons (Corresponding author)



 

Federico Gonzalez





Objectives





  • Recognize patients requiring a needle thoracocentesis or an emergency chest tube insertion


  • Perform safe thora(co)centesis or chest tube insertion


  • Recognize when a patient needs an emergency pericardiocentesis


  • Perform a subxiphoid pericardial window

Every general surgeon should be able to manage the following non-trauma chest emergencies:



  • Tension pneumothorax


  • Pleural effusions (compressive or empyema)


  • Cardiac tamponade


26.1 Pneumothorax



26.1.1 Tension Pneumothorax



26.1.1.1 Causes






  • Pneumothorax may occur spontaneously in non-trauma patient without apparent chronic lung disease (primary). This is usually subsequent to ruptures of small pulmonary blebs.


  • Pneumothorax may also occur in patients with chronic lung disease (“secondary”); e.g., emphysema, tumors. In that case, the rupture involves bullae or diseased pulmonary parenchyma.


26.1.1.2 Diagnosis






  • Main symptoms:



    • Chest pain and shortness of breath


    • High-pitched sounds on percussion


  • Chest X-ray: confirmation of pneumothorax and determination of volume


  • Tension pneumothorax (one-way air leak)



    • Rare


    • May lead to respiratory distress, oxygen deprivation, tachycardia, hypotension, tracheal deviation, and cardiac arrest



      • Specifically when there is preexisting impaired lung function


26.1.1.3 Indications






  • When symptoms are severe, urgent insertion of chest tube is needed.



    • Initial management by needle decompression is easy and allows to gain time.


26.2 Liquid Pleural Effusions



26.2.1 Types of Effusion and Causes






  • Blood: primary spontaneous hemothorax (can occur in patients under anticoagulant treatment).


  • Pus: thoracic empyema (or pyothorax) can be responsible for poor clinical status and respiratory failure.


  • Serous liquid: secondary to pulmonary infection, pulmonary embolism, cancers, etc.


26.2.2 Diagnosis






  • Relies on symptoms (dyspnea, chest pain), chest percussion, chest X-ray, and CT scan.



    • Symptomatology depends on the volume of the collection.


  • Pleurocentesis can identify the nature of the aspirate (blood, pus, serous liquid, transudate, exudate, etc.)


26.2.3 Indications






  • Most pleural effusions can be managed initially by medical physician’s referral to thoracic or cardiovascular surgeon and may be necessary according to the type and nature of the pathology.


  • Two circumstances require urgent treatment:

    1.

    Respiratory failure (dyspnea, cyanosis, hypoxemia, etc.); insert a chest tube promptly



    • Pleurocentesis can improve the clinical status of the patient before the chest tube is inserted.

     

    2.

    Purulent collections found on pleurocentesis or empyema

    (a)

    Definitions:

    i.

    Empyema means pus in a natural cavity.

     

    ii.

    Thoracic empyema means pus in the pleural cavity.

     

     

    (b)

    Diagnosis can be

    i.

    Frank pus is found

     

    ii.

    Or demonstration of organisms by direct examination or culture

     

    iii.

    And/or biochemical criteria such as pH <7.2, WBC >15,000, LDH >1,000 IU/ML, and glucose <400 mg/l

     

     

     


  • Chest tube thoracotomy with IV antibiotics



    • Thoracocentesis constitutes the first step of the treatment.



      • May be sufficient (success rate is 70 %)


    • Should be followed by drainage thoracostomy



      • To allow complete evacuation of accumulated pus


    • In case of failure (multiloculated effusion) and according to the stage of the empyema, surgery is necessary.



      • To clean the pleural cavity


      • To perform decortication as needed (Fowler-Delorme procedure)



        • Can be performed via VATS or thoracotomy


        • Referral to specialized centers and/or surgeon preferable


26.2.4 Thoracentesis (Also Called Thoracocentesis or Pleurocentesis) and Chest Tube Insertion



26.2.4.1 Thoracocentesis or Pleurocentesis (Pleural Tap)




Oct 16, 2016 | Posted by in EMERGENCY MEDICINE | Comments Off on Thoracic Emergencies

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