Spontaneous pneumothorax

Background

  • Primary Pneumothorax
    • Spontaneous ptx in pt w/o underlying pulm disease
  • Secondary Pneumothorax
    • Spontaneous ptx in pt w/ underlying pulm disease
    • Worse prognosis

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

The pleural cavity is normally a potential space, in which air collects in a pneumothorax.

Acute dyspnea

Emergent

Non-Emergent

Diagnosis

Pneumothorax.jpeg
  • CXR
    • Displaced visceral pleural line w/o lung markings between pleural line and chest wall
    • Air fluid level with Pleural Effusion = ptx
    • Supine CXR view shows deep sulcus sign
  • CT Chest
    • Very sensitive and specific
  • Ultrasound: Lungs
    • NO comet tail artifact
    • No sliding lung sign
    • Bar Code (instead of waves on the beach) appearance on M-mode

Size

  • Small: <3cm apex to cupola (chest wall)
  • Large: >3cm lung apex to cupola (chest wall)

Management

Initial Management Options

  • Observation alone
  • Observation + oxygen,
    • Oxygen (3L/min nasal cannula to 10L/min mask) increases pleural air resorption by 3-4x
  • Needle or catheter aspiration
    • Needle/catheter aspiration is as effective as chest tube for small ptxs
      • Place in 2nd IC space in midclavicular line or 4th/5th IC space in ant axillary line
      • If lung fails to expand can try 2nd aspiration attempt, Heimlich valve, or chest tube
  • Tube thoracostomy
    • Use for large, recurrent, or b/l ptxs, abnormal vitals, or large air leak anticipated
    • Underwater seal drainage is adequate (suction only necessary if persistent air leak)

Stable, First Episode

  • Small AND asymptomatic (≤2 to 3 cm between the lung and chest wall on a chest radiograph)
    • Supplemental oxygen and observed
  • Large OR symptomatic (>3 cm rim of air on chest radiograph)
    • Aspiration
      • If fail aspiration, chest tube and thoracoscopy^

Stable, Recurrent OR Hemopneumothorax

  • Chest tube + thoracoscopy^

Unstable

^if thoracoscopy is not readily available, chemical pleurodesis through the chest tube

Primary Spontaneous Pneumothorax

  • Small size, clinically stable
    • Option 1: Observe for 6hr; d/c if no sx and have pt return in 24hr for recheck
    • Option 2: Small-size catheter (<14F) or needle aspiration with immediate catheter removal
      • Then observe for 6h; d/c if no sx and have pt return in 24hr for recheck
    • Option 3: Small-size catheter or chest tube (10-14F), Heimlich valve or water-seal, admit
  • Large size or bilateral
    • Mod-size chest tube (16-22) and admit; large-size chest tube (24-36) if hemothorax

Secondary Pneumothorax

  • Small size, clinically stable
    • Small-size catheter or chest tube, Heimlich valve or water-seal drainage, and admit
    • Observation alone associated with some mortality
  • Large size or bilateral
    • Mod-size chest tube (16-22) and admission; large-size chest tube (24-36) if hemothorax

Disposition

Special Instructions

Flying

  • Patients can consider flying 1 week after resolution of pneumothorax [1]

See Also

References

  1. British Thoracic Society Guidelines PDF