Title: Pleural Diseases
1Pleural Diseases
- Pleural effusion
- Pneumothorax
Is that supposed to be in there?
By John J. Beneck PA-C, MSPA
2Case 1
- 72 year old female with history of heart failure
presents with DOE. Recently stopped her evening
furosemide because she was sick of going to the
bathroom all night.
3Case 2
- 52 Year old male who presents with slowly
worsening DOE, vague CP, and weight loss. Hx
reveals long term occupation as auto mechanic
specializing in brake work.
4Case 3
- 19 year old male awakened with vague right chest
pain, worse with inspiration. Steadily worsening
throughout the day. Now severe (9/10) and short
of breath.
5Objectives
- Definition/types/classifications
- Epidemiology
- Presentation
- Etiology/pathology
- Diagnosis/Studies
- Interventions/Therapeutics
6Abbreviations
- Abx - Antibiotics
- AFB Acid fast Bacilli
- BPD Brochopulmonary Dysplagia
- Bx - Biopsy
- CF Cystic Fibrosis
- COPD Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
- CXR Chest X ray
- CP Costophrenic
- DOE Dyspnea on exertion
- DDx Differential diagnosis
- Dz Disease
- HA - Headache
- LDH Lactate dehydrogenase
- PMN Polymorphonucleocyte
- Tx Treatment
7Pleural Effusion
- Excessive pleural fluid
- Fluid in the space between the lung and the chest
wall.
8Pleural Effusion - Epidemiology
- Can result from over 50 Pleuropulmonary or
systemic disorders - Source is NOT evident following diagnostic
thoracentesis in up to 25 percent of patients
9Normal Pleural Fluid
- 20ml/day produced
- lt10ml present at any one time
- 1-1.5 Grams/100ml protein
- Few mononuclear cells
10Effusion Presentation
- Typically Associated with underlying Dz
- Dyspnea
- Chest pain
- Hypoxemia
- CXR
- Blunt CP angle, forms meniscus
- Lateral Decubitus film
11Exam
- Decreased Expansion (gt 750 ml)
- Decreased Fremitus (gt 750 ml)
- Dull/flat percussion
- Decreased Breath sounds
- Egophony
- Mediastinal shift (gt1500 ml)
12Pleural Effusion Imaging
13Large Effusion
14Left Pleural Effusion
Notice the arc
15Loculated Pleural Effusion
16CT Evidence of Effusion
17Diagnosis Etiology is Key
- Most pleural effusions require further evaluation
unless their origin is clear (e.g., heart
failure, ascites) and the patient is responding
well to therapy
18Pleural Effusion Etiology
- Why does fluid accumulate?
- Abnormal production
- Leaking or discharge
- Abnormal absorption
- Narrowing the DDx
- History
- Effusion sampling/analysis
19Dx Starts With Classification
- Types
- Transudative
- Exudative
20Pleural Effusion
- Transudative pleural effusions ?
- Formed when the normal hydrostatic or oncotic
pressures are disturbed. - Increased mean capillary pressure (heart failure)
- Decreased capillary oncotic pressure (cirrhosis
or nephrotic syndrome)
21Pleural Effusion
- Exudative pleural effusions ?
- Occur when there is damage or disruption of the
normal pleural membranes or vasculature - Increased capillary permeability (Inflamation,
neoplasm) - Decreased lymphatic drainage (e.g., tumor
involvement of the pleural space, infection,
inflammatory conditions, or trauma)
22Exudative Effusion (cont.)
- Chylothorax
- Pulmonary emboli
- Parapneumonic
- Malignancy
- Drug or radiation reactions
23Exudates Lights Criteria
- Exudates have at least one (and transudates NONE)
of the following - (Pleural fluid serum) protein ratio more than
0.5 - (Pleural fluid serum) lactate dehydrogenase
(LDH) ratio more than 0.6 - Pleural fluid LDH more than two-thirds of the
upper limit of normal for serum LDH
24Gross Analysis of Pleural Fluid
- Blood
- Pulmonary infarction
- Tumor
- Trauma
- (Pleural fluid blood) hematocrit ratio more
than 0.5 establishes the diagnosis of a
Hemothorax - Odor
- Color
- Viscosity
25Lab Analysis of Pleural Fluid
- pH
- Glucose
- LDH
- Amylase
- Triglycerides
26Other Studies
- Cell count and differential
- Protein
- Microbiologic stains
- Wrights
- Gram
- AFB
- Fungal
- Cultures
- Cytology
27Now about these studies
28pH Less Than 7.3
- Empyema
- Tuberculosis
- Malignancy
- Connective tissue disease
- Esophageal rupture
29Glucose Concentration Less Than 40 mg/dl
- Empyema
- Tuberculosis
- Malignancy
- Connective tissue disease
30Elevation of Amylase
- Pancreatitis
- Pancreatic pseudocyst
- Malignancy
- Esophageal rupture
31Elevation of Triglycerides (gt110 mg/dl)
- Chylous effusions
- Thoracic duct rupture from trauma, surgery, or
malignancy (usually lymphoma) - Chyliform effusions
32Last Resort for Diagnosis
- Closed Pleural Biopsy
- Exudative pleural effusion indeterminate by
thoracentesis
33Pleural Effusion Treatment -General-
- Variable depending on effusion type and
symptomatology - To drain, or not to drain
34Symptomatic Pleural Effusions
- May require removal of large amounts of pleural
fluid - Rapid removal of gt 1 liter of fluid may rarely
result in ipsilateral pulmonary edema
352 Specific Exudative Effusions
- Parapneumonic effusions
- Malignant effusions
36Parapneumonic Effusions
- Associated with bacterial pneumonia
- Exudates with a leukocyte count usually more than
10,000/mm3 and a predominance of PMNs - Thoracentesis is required to identify pathogen(s)
37Parapneumonic Effusions (cont.)
- Incidence/epidemiology
- S. pneumo
- 40-60
- S. aureus
- Most without empyema
- 70 in infants
- 40 in adults
38Parapneumonic Effusions (cont.)
- Incidence/epidemiology
- S. pyogenes
- Uncommon etiology of pneumonia
- 55-95 have large effusion
- Gram (-)
- Klebsiella
- E. coli
- Pseudomonas
39Parapneumonic Effusion Types
- Complicated
- Uncomplicated
- Helps differentiate the need for chest tube
drainage
--Who cares?--
40Uncomplicated Parapneumonic Effusion
- pH gt7.30
- Glucose gt60 mg/dl
- LDH of lt500 IU/liter
41Uncomplicated Parapneumonic Effusions
- Should resolve with antimicrobial therapy for the
underlying pneumonia - Suspect complicated if
- Temp incr. despite abx tx
- Pt develops incr. Pleural fluid despite tx
- Loculated effusion develops
42Complicated Parapneumonic Effusion
- pH lt7.10
- Glucose lt40 mg/dl
- LDH gt1,000 lU/liter)
43Complicated Parapneumonic Effusion
44Complicated Parapneumonic Effusions
- Should be considered for immediate drainage
- Occasional patients (e.g., Streptococcus
pneumoniae infections) appear to do well without
drainage - No established role for repeated therapeutic
thoracenteses in the treatment of complicated
parapneumonic effusions.
45Empyema
- Drain
- Antibiotics
- Consider thoracotomy with decortication
- Most effective for chronic empyema which does not
drain completely
46Malignant Pleural Effusions
- Tumor involvement of the pleura or mediastinum
- Malignant mesothelioma
- Cytology is positive in approximately 60 of
malignant effusions
47Malignant Pleural Effusions
- Therapeutic thoracentesis
- Chemotherapy and mediastinal radiation therapy
- Observation
48Recurrent Malignant Effusions
- Repeated thoracenteses are reasonable
- Complete drainage via chest tube followed by
adhesive therapy - Pleurectomy or pleural abrasion
- Requires thoracotomy
- Chemical sclerosis
49Epidemic Pleurodynia (Bornholm Disease)
- Caused by Group B Coxsackievirus
- Milder in children
- Epigastric or lower anterior chest pain
- Sudden
- Severe
- Frequently intermittent and/or pleuritic
50Pleurodynia (cont.)
- Fever, HA, sore throat, malaise
- Local tenderness, hyperesthesia, muscle swelling
- Myalgias
51Pleurodynia (cont.)
- Course
- Subsides in 2-4 days
- May relapse/recur for several weeks
- Complications
- Orchitis
- Fibrinous pleuritis
- Pericarditis
- Asceptic meningitis (rare)
52 Pleurodynia (cont.)
- Diagnosis
- Usually epidemic
- Sporadic cases may be isolated from throat or
stool - Treatment
- Symptomatic
- Prognosis
- Good in uncomplicated cases
53Pneumothorax
54Pneumothorax
55Spontaneous Pneumothorax
- Primary
- No other concurrant lung dz
- Secondary
- Occurs with concurrent lung dz
- BPD, CF, COPD, S. aureus infection, Infarc
56Pneumothorax (other)
- Traumatic
- Iatrogenic
- Thoracentesis
- Pleural Bx
- Central line placement
- Ventilator associated
57Clinical Presentation
- Chest pain
- Dyspnea
- Hypoxemia
- Hypotension
- Non-productive cough (10)
- Sudden or insidious onset
58Exam
- Incr. resonance
- Decr. fremitous
- Decr. breath sounds
- Hammans sign (lt5)
- Crackling with heartbeat
- Subcutaneous emphysema (rare)
- CXR
- Identify visceral pleural line
59X Ray
60X Ray
- Tension Pneumothorax
- 2 - UpToDate
61Treatment Options
- Observe
- Bed rest
- Oxygen
- Needle decompression
- Tube thorocostomy
- Continue 24-48 hrs after last air leak
62Basis For Treatment Decision
- Patient presentation
- Likelihood of resolution
- Likelihood of recurrence
63Resolution
- 3-4 weeks
- 1.25 hemithorax per day
64In Review
- Pleural diseases typically manifested as
symptomatic effusion - Transudate
- Exudate
- Presence of bacteria
- Presence of malignant cells
65Pneumothorax
- Spontaneous vs. nonspontaneous
- Support observe vs. decompress
66What about those cases
- 72 year old female with history of heart failure
presents with DOE. Recently stopped her evening
furosemide because she was sick of going to the
bathroom all night. - 52 Year old male who presents with slowly
worsening DOE, vague CP, and weight loss. Hx
reveals long term occupation as auto mechanic
specializing in brake work. - 19 year old male awakened with vague right chest
pain, worse with inspiration. Steadily worsening
throughout the day. Now severe (9/10) and short
of breath.