Spontaneous pneumothorax: Difference between revisions

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''"Spontaneous" essentially refers all pneumothoraxes of "non-traumatic" etiologies''
==Background==
==Background==
*Primary Pneumothorax
*Primary Pneumothorax

Revision as of 22:13, 13 May 2015

"Spontaneous" essentially refers all pneumothoraxes of "non-traumatic" etiologies

Background

  • Primary Pneumothorax
    • No underlying pulmonary disease
  • Secondary Pneumothorax
    • With underlying pulmonary disease
    • Worse prognosis

Secondary Causes

  • Smoking
  • COPD
  • Asthma
  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Necrotizing pneumonia
  • Lung abscess
  • PCP PNA
  • TB
  • Neoplasm
  • Interstitial lung disease
  • Connective tissue disease
  • Pulmonary infarct

Clinical Features

  • Sudden onset pleuritic chest pain evolving to dull constant ache over days
  • Most often occurs at rest, not during exertion
  • Tachypnea, hypoxemia, increased work of breathing
  • Reduced ipsilateral lung excursion
  • Hypotension -> tension pneumothorax

Differential Diagnosis

Pneumothorax Types

Acute dyspnea

Emergent

Non-Emergent

Diagnosis

Clinically Stable

Defined as having all of the following:

  • Resp rate < 24
  • Heart rate 60-120 beats per minute
  • Normal BP
  • SaO2 >90% on room air and patient can speak in whole sentences

Workup

Pneumothorax.jpeg
  • CXR
    • Displaced visceral pleural line without lung markings between pleural line and chest wall
    • Upright is best
      • Expiratory films DO NOT improve accuracy[1]
      • Lateral decubitus films with suspected side up do increase sensitivity. Good approach in pediatrics to avoid CT
    • Supine CXR = deep sulcus sign
  • CT Chest
    • Very sensitive and specific

Estimating Size

Measuring pneumothoraxes. Line A = lung apex to cupola. Line B = interpleural distance.
  • On a conventional, upright posterior-anterior chest radiograph:
    • Small: ≤3cm lung apex to cupola (chest wall apex) on CXR
    • Large: >3cm lung apex to cupola (chest wall apex) on CXR
3cm apex to cupola measurement is roughly equivalent to 2cm interpleural distance (at the level of the hilum)
Both roughly correlate with a 50% pneumothorax by volume

Management

Supplemental oxygen (non-rebreather mask) initially for all

Unstable

Primary Spontaneous Pneumothorax (Stable)

First Episode

  • Small AND asymptomatic/minimally symptomatic
  • Large OR with significant symptoms
    • Aspiration (see below)
      • If fail, proceed to chest tube and thoracoscopy (VATS)^

Recurrent OR Hemopneumothorax

^If thoracoscopy (VATS) is not readily available, chemical pleurodesis through the chest tube

Secondary Pneumothorax (Stable)

  • Asymptomatic AND very small (<1 cm interpleural distance)
  • Asymptomatic AND small
    • Chest tube (some centers may choose needle aspiration under ultrasound guidance)
    • Observation alone associated with some mortality
  • Symptomatic OR large OR bilateral
Admit all secondary pneumothoraxes

Needle Aspiration

  • Use thoracentesis kit, if available
  • Place in 2nd IC space in midclavicular line or 4th/5th IC space in anterior axillary line
  • Withdraw air with syringe until no more can be aspirated
    • Assume a persistent air leak (failure) if no resistance after 4 liters of air has been aspirated AND the lung has not expanded
  • Once no further air can be aspirated:
    • Option 1
      • Place closed stopcock and secure catheter to the chest wall
      • Obtain CXR four hours later
      • If adequate lung expansion has occurred, remove catheter
      • Following another two hours of observation, obtain another CXR
      • If the lung remains expanded, discharge patient
    • Option 2
      • Leave catheter in place
      • Attached a Heimlich (one-way) valve
      • Discharged with follow-up within two days

Adult Chest Tube Sizes

Chest Tube Size Type of Patient Underlying Causes
Small (8-14 Fr)
  • Alveolar-pleural fistulae (small air leak)
  • Iatrogenic air
Medium (20-28 Fr)
  • Trauma/bleeding (hemothorax/hemopneumothorax)
  • Bronchial-pleural fistulae (large air leak)
  • Malignant fluid
Large (36-40 Fr)
  • Thick pus

Disposition

Primary

  • See Management section

Secondary

  • Almost all admitted

Special Instructions

Flying

  • Can consider flying 2 weeks after full resolution of traumatic pneumothroax[4]

See Also

References

  1. Eur Respir J. 1996 Mar;9(3):406-9
  2. Inaba Et. al J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2012 Feb;72(2):422-7.
  3. Advanced Trauma Life Support® Update 2019: Management and Applications for Adults and Special Populations.
  4. "Management of spontaneous pneumothorax: British Thoracic Society pleural disease guideline 2010" British Thoracic Society Guidelines. Thorax 2010;65:ii18-ii31 doi:10.1136/thx.2010.136986 PDF