Title: CHEST TRAUMA
1CHEST TRAUMA
- Joe Lex, MD, FAAEM
- Temple University Hospital
- Philadelphia, PA
- July 20th, 2006
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3Incidence of Chest Trauma
- 1/4 American trauma deaths
- Contributes to another 1 of 4
- Many die after reaching hospital - preventable
if recognized - lt10 blunt needs surgery
- 1/3 penetrating needs surgery
- Most life-saving procedures do NOT require
thoracic surgeon
4Pathophysiology of Chest Trauma
TISSUE HYPOXIA
5Pathophysiology of Chest Trauma
- Tissue hypoxia
- Hypercarbia
- Respiratory acidosis inadequate ventilation
- Metabolic acidosis tissue hypoperfusion (e.g.,
shock)
6Blunt trauma
7Blunt trauma
8Blunt trauma
9Blunt trauma
10Blunt trauma
11Blunt trauma
12Blunt trauma
13Blunt trauma
14Blunt trauma
15Blunt trauma
16Penetrating trauma
17Penetrating trauma
18Penetrating trauma
Splinter
19Penetrating trauma
20Penetrating trauma
21Penetrating trauma
22Penetrating trauma
23Penetrating trauma
24Penetrating trauma
25Penetrating trauma
266 Immediate Life Threats
- Airway obstruction
- Tension pneumothorax
- Open pneumothorax
- sucking chest wound
- Massive hemothorax
- Flail chest
- Cardiac tamponade
276 Potential Life Threats
- Lung contusion
- Heart contusion
- Aorta rupture
- Diaphragm rupture
- Tracheobronchial tree injury - larynx, trachea,
bronchus - Esophagus trauma
286 Other Frequent Injuries
- Subcutaneous emphysema
- Traumatic asphyxia
- Simple pneumothorax
- Hemothorax
- Scapula fracture
- Rib fractures
29Primary Survey
- Airway
- Breathing
- Circulation
30A Airway
- Assess for airway patency and air exchange -
listen at nose mouth - Assess for intercostal and supraclavicular muscle
retractions - Assess oropharynx for foreign body obstruction
31B Breathing
- Assess respiratory movements and quality of
respirations look, listen, feel - Shallow respirations are early indicator of
distress cyanosis is late
32C Circulation
- Assess pulses for quality, rate, regularity
- Assess blood pressure and pulse pressure
- Skin - look and feel for color, temperature,
capillary refill - Look at neck veins - flat vs. distended
- Cardiac monitor
33Where can adults hide blood and go into shock?
- Chest listen, do chest x-ray
- Abdomen do DPL or CT or US
- Retroperitoneum do CT
- Thigh physical examination
- Street ask paramedic
- ...and in children, add
- Head
34Initial assessment and management
- Primary survey
- Resuscitation of vital functions
- Detailed secondary survey
- Definitive care
35Initial assessment and management
- Hypoxia most serious problem early interventions
aimed at reversing - Immediate life-threatening injuries treated
quickly and simply, usually with tube or a needle - Secondary survey guided by high suspicion for
specific injuries
36Thoracotomy
- Closed heart massage is ineffective in a
hypovolemic patient - Left anterior thoracotomy with cross-clamping of
descending thoracic aorta and open-chest massage
may be useful in pulseless victim of penetrating
trauma
37Thoracotomy
- Emergency department thoracotomy for patients
without cardiac activity who are victims of blunt
thoracic injuries is ineffective
38Thoracotomy
Nipple
39Thoracotomy
40Thoracotomy
41Thoracotomy
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446 Immediate Life Threats
- Airway obstruction
- Tension pneumothorax
- Open pneumothorax
- sucking chest wound
- Massive hemothorax
- Flail chest
- Cardiac tamponade
45Airway Obstruction
- Airway obstruction at alveolar level assessed
and managed during 2o survey - Upper airway obstruction ? immediate life threat
which must be dealt with in primary survey - Most common cause patients tongue
46Airway Obstruction
- Chin-lift fingers under mandible, lift forward
so chin is anterior
47Airway Obstruction
48Airway Obstruction
- Jaw thrust grasp angles of mandible and bring
jaw forward
49Airway Obstruction
- Oropharyngeal airway insert into mouth behind
tongue - DO NOT push tongue further back
50Airway Obstruction
- Nasopharyngeal airway gently insert
well-lubricated trumpet through nostril
51Airway Obstruction
- Definitive Airway
- Management tube in trachea through vocal cords
with balloon inflated
52Airway Obstruction
- Orotracheal intubation
- Nasotracheal intubation in breathing patient
without major facial trauma - Surgical airways
- jet insufflation
- retrograde
- cricothyrotomy
- tracheostomy
53Airway Obstruction
Jet insufflation adapters
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55How to perform cricothyroidotomy
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66Tension pneumothorax
- Air leak through lung or chest wall
- One-way valve ? lung collapse
- Mediastinum shifts to opposite side
- Inferior vena cava kinks on diaphragm
?decreased venous return ? cardiovascular collapse
67Inferior vena cava
68Tension pneumothorax
- Tension pneumothorax is not an x-ray diagnosis
it MUST be recognized clinically - Treatment is decompression needle into 2nd
intercostal space of mid-clavicular line -
followed by thoracotomy tube
69Insert needle here
70Open pneumothorax
- Sucking Chest Wound
- Normal ventilation requires negative
intra-thoracic pressure - Large open chest-wall defect ? immediate
equilibration of intra-thoracic and atmospheric
pressures - If hole gt2/3 tracheal diameter, air prefers chest
defect
71Open pneumothorax
72Open pneumothorax
- Initial treatment seal defect and secure on
three sides (total occlusion may lead to tension
pneumothorax - Definitive repair of defect in O.R.
73Massive hemothorax
- Rapid accumulation of gt1500 cc blood in chest
cavity - Hypovolemia hypoxemia
- Neck veins may be
- Flat from hypovolemia
- Distended intrathoracic blood
- Absent breath sounds, DULL to percussion
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77Massive hemothorax treatment
- Large-bore (32 to 36 F) tube to drain blood
- If moderate sized (500 to 1500 ml) and stops
bleeding, closed drainage usually sufficient - If initial drainage gt1500 ml OR continuous
bleeding gt200 ml / hr, OPEN THORACOTOMY indicated
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79How to place a chest tube
80Pleural space
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87Flail chest
- Free-floating chest segment, usually from
multiple ribs fractures - Pain and restricted movement paradoxical
movement of chest wall with respiration
88Flail chest
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90Flail treatment (old)
91Flail treatment (old)
92Flail treatment
- Ventilate well
- Humidify oxygen
- Resuscitate with fluids
- Manage pain (!!)
- Stabilize chest
- Internal ? ventilator
- External ? sand bags (rare)
93Cardiac tamponade
- Usually from penetrating injuries
- Classic Becks triad
- elevated venous pressure - neck veins
- decreased arterial pressure - BP
- muffled heart sounds
- Blood in sac
- prevents cardiac
- activity
94Cardiac tamponade
- May find pulsus paradoxus - a decrease of 10 mm
Hg or greater in systolic BP during inspiration - Systolic to diastolic gradient of less than 30 mm
Hg also suggestive
95Cardiac tamponade
- Treatment is removal of small amount of blood
15 to 20 ml may be sufficient from pericardial
sac
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97Pericardiocentesis
98Stab wound to right ventricle
99pericardium
epicardial fat
100Ten-minute break
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102The Flock of Birds behind the heart
Thoracic duck
1036 Potential Life Threats
- Pulmonary contusion
- Myocardial contusion
- Traumatic aortic rupture (TAR)
- Traumatic diaphragmatic rupture
- Tracheobronchial tree injury larynx, trachea,
bronchus - Esophageal trauma
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105Pulmonary contusion
- Potentially life-threatening condition with
insidious onset - Parenchymal injury without laceration
- More than 50 will develop pneumonia, even with
treatment - Up to 50 have only hemoptysis as presenting
symptom
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108Pulmonary contusion
- Patients with pre-existing conditions (emphysema,
renal failure) need early intubation - Treatment needs
- to occur over time
- as symptoms develop
109Myocardial contusion
- Blunt precordial chest trauma
- Difficult to diagnose
- Risk for dysrhythmia, sudden death, tamponade,
pericarditis, ventricular aneurysm
110Myocardial contusion
111Myocardial contusion
- Also may see
- myocardial concussion ? stunned myocardium with
no cell death - coronary artery laceration
- Diagnosis by
- trans-esophageal echocardiogram (TEE)
- serial cardiac enzymes / markers
112Myocardial contusion
- Question Does it matter?
- New nomenclature Anterior Chest Wall Syndrome
113FORD
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115Traumatic aortic rupture
- 90 or more dead at scene
- 90 mortality each undiagnosed day
- Must have high index of suspicion
- Disruption occurs at ligamentum arteriosum
(ductus arteriosus) - Contained hematoma of 500 to 1000 ml of blood
116Traumatic aortic rupture
- Radiographic signs
- Wide mediastinum (gt8cm)
- Fractured 1st 2nd rib
- Obliterated aortic knob
- Trachea deviated to right
- Pleural cap
- Elevated mainstem bronchus with shift to right
- Obliterated aortic window
- Esophagus shifted to right (NG at T4)
- Depressed left mainstem bronchus
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119dye leakage
120Traumatic aortic rupture
- CT becoming imaging of choice
- Must know site!
- NPV of normal chest x-ray (good quality,
upright) 98 (CT will find mediastinal
hemorrhage in 3, TAR in 0.4) - 78 of patients with post-traumatic wide
mediastinum on chest film have normal CT
121Traumatic aortic rupture
- Treatment - SURGICAL REPAIR
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123Traumatic diaphragmatic rupture
- Blunt trauma tears leading to immediate
herniation - Penetrating trauma small tears which may take
years to develop herniation - Usually on left side
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125Traumatic diaphragmatic rupture
- Treatment surgical repair
126Tracheobronchial tree injury
- Larynx - rare
- Hoarseness
- Subcutaneous emphysema
- Palpable crepitus
- Intubation may be difficult tracheostomy (not
cricothyroidotomy) is treatment of choice
127Tracheobronchial tree injury
- Trachea
- Blunt or penetrating
- Esophagus, carotid
- artery and jugular
- vein may be involved
- Noisy breathing ?
- partial airway
- obstruction
128Tracheobronchial tree injury
- Bronchus
- 1.5 blunt chest trauma
- 80 due to BLUNT trauma within one inch of carina
(tethered)
129Esophageal trauma
- Penetrating gt blunt
- Lethal if not recognized
- High suspicion if
- left pneumothorax and hemothorax without rib
fracture - shock out of proportion to apparent blunt chest
trauma - particulate matter in chest tube
130Esophageal trauma
131Esophageal trauma
- Blunt trauma, most tears superior
- If low esophagus ? leakage of stomach contents
into mediastinum
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1336 Other Frequent Injuries
- Subcutaneous emphysema
- Traumatic asphyxia
- Simple pneumothorax
- Hemothorax
- Scapula fracture
- Rib fractures
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135Subcutaneous emphysema
- Rice Krispies
- May result from
- airway injury
- lung injury
- blast injury
- No treatment
- required ? address underlying problem
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138Traumatic asphyxia
- Purple face from extravasation of blood (Masque
ecchymotique) - Major damage is to underlying structures
- Purple face fades over time in survivors
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140Simple pneumothorax
- Air enters potential space between visceral and
parietal pleura - Breath sounds down on affected side
- Percussion ? hyper-resonance
- Treatment chest tube in 4th or 5th intercostal
space anterior to mid-axillary line
141Medial pneumothorax
142Pocket shooter
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144Hemothorax
- Lacerated lung OR disrupted intercostal artery or
internal mammary artery - Most are self-limiting
- Surgical consultation if
- initial drainage of gt20 cc/kg (1500 cc)
- continued flow of gt200 cc/hr
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146Scapula fractures
- Fractured scapula or 1st 2nd ribs indicates
major mechanism of injury consider underlying
damage
147Rib fractures
- Most frequent thoracic cage injury
- Most commonly injured 4th ? 9th
- If 10th / 11th / 12th ? suspect liver or spleen
injury - If 1st / 2nd / 3rd worry about injury to head,
neck, spinal cords, lungs, great vessels
148Rib fractures treatment
- Intercostal blocks
- Epidural anesthesia
- Systemic analgesics
- Do not use
- taping
- rib belts
- external splints
149Rib fractures
- Ribs x-rays
- are expensive
- are inaccurate for diagnosis (50 sensitivity)
- add nothing to treatment
- require painful positioning of the patient
- are, in general, not useful
150In conclusion...
- Chest trauma is common in the multiply-injured
patient - Most conditions can be treated by the evaluating
physician and do not require emergent thoracotomy - Airway management and a judiciously placed needle
can save many lives
151Next time
- February 27th, 2004
- Respiratory
- Emergencies
- Joe Lex
- joe_at_joelex.net