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Basics

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Author:

Benjamin I.Liotta

Christopher J.Coyne


Description!!navigator!!

Etiology!!navigator!!

Diagnosis

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Signs and Symptoms!!navigator!!

History

  • Time of injury
  • Mechanism of injury
  • Estimates of motor vehicle accident (MVA) velocity and deceleration
  • Loss of consciousness
  • Chest pain
  • Pain with deep inspiration or cough
  • Dyspnea

Physical Exam

  • Unilaterally absent breath sounds
  • Crepitus or subcutaneous air in the chest wall
  • Decreased or absent breath sounds
  • Tenderness to palpation on the chest wall
  • Jugular venous distention
  • Tracheal deviation away from midline
  • Hyper-resonance to percussion on involved side

Essential Workup!!navigator!!

Diagnostic Tests & Interpretation!!navigator!!

Lab

  • Baseline hemoglobin
  • Pulse oximetry
  • ABG
  • Serum lactate
  • Type and cross-match
  • Coagulation profile
  • Cardiac enzymes when indicated
  • Periodic chemistry panel for patients receiving significant fluid resuscitation

Imaging

  • CXR is the initial radiologic study of choice:
    • If CXR reveals widened mediastinum and patient hemodynamically stable, repeat film in upright position
  • Chest CT is more specific for pneumothoraces and pulmonary contusions/occult injuries
  • Chest CT with contrast, or aortic angiogram, is useful in identifying aortic and large-vessel injuries
  • Consider using the NEXUS Chest CT criteria in stable, awake, nonintoxicated patients. If all criteria are absent, chest CT may not be necessary:
    • Abnormal CXR
    • Distracting injury
    • Chest wall tenderness
    • Sternal tenderness
    • Thoracic spine tenderness
    • Scapular tenderness
    • Rapid deceleration mechanism, i.e., 40 mph
  • MVC or fall >20' (including [7] increases sensitivity, decreases specificity)
  • Thoracic US can be efficiently used for detecting pneumothoraces and pericardial injuries. The sensitivity, specificity, and overall accuracy in the ED setting for such injuries is >90%
  • Esophagoscopy for direct endoscopic visualization if esophageal injury suspected
  • Contrast esophagogram (with water and then barium) for possible esophageal injuries if esophagoscopy negative, but patient at risk for esophageal injury (e.g., pneumomediastinum):
    • Combination of these 2 tests in sequence reaches close to 100% sensitivity
  • ECG if sternal tenderness is present or abnormalities on cardiac monitor

Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery

  • If the patient is unstable, emergency thoracotomy may be necessary to repair a traumatic aortic disruption
  • If there are signs of cardiac tamponade, and patient is stable, perform an echocardiogram urgently:
    • Pericardial effusions, wall motion defects, aortic injuries, valvular or other intracardiac pathology may also be identified
  • If there are signs of cardiac tamponade and the patient is unstable, consider emergent pericardiocentesis, followed by immediate transport to the OR for a pericardial window
  • If there is evidence of an aortic tear on imaging, the patient may require emergent surgical or endovascular repair
  • Bronchoscopy often indicated for possible upper airway injuries (e.g., a large persistent air leak after chest tube)
Pregnancy Prophylaxis
  • In pregnant patients, remember to use the least amount of radiation available and to shield the uterus during imaging when possible
  • Take note of the differences in anatomy of the thoracic cavity in pregnant patients, as well as differences in lab values, intravascular volume, and cardiovascular physiology
  • See “Pregnancy, Trauma in,” for details

Differential Diagnosis!!navigator!!

Pediatric Considerations
The rib cage is highly elastic in children and can withstand significant forces without overt signs of external trauma and can underestimate even major intrathoracic injuries
  • Retrospective studies have proposed limiting chest CT in pediatric trauma to patients with a vehicle-related mechanism or an abnormal CXR

Geriatric Considerations
Elderly patients have been shown to have greater respiratory complications, including ARDS and pneumonia, than younger patients in the setting of blunt chest trauma. This is especially true in those >85 yr of age

Treatment

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Prehospital!!navigator!!

Initial Stabilization/Therapy!!navigator!!

ED Treatment/Procedures!!navigator!!

Medication!!navigator!!

ALERT
  • This practice is under debate and becoming less utilized, so know your hospital's protocol
  • Judicious doses of short-acting analgesics (fentanyl 1-2 mcg/kg IV, morphine 0.1 mg/kg IV) as needed for pain control

Follow-Up

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Disposition!!navigator!!

Admission Criteria

  • Patients with conduction blocks, frequent ectopy, or ischemic changes visible on ECG should be admitted to a monitored setting for possible myocardial contusion
  • Hemodynamically unstable patients should go to the OR on an emergency basis for thoracotomy or laparotomy
  • >1,000-1,500 mL of blood drawn out of the chest tube on initial insertion indicates need for thoracotomy/operative management
  • >200 mL of blood per hour from chest tube for several hours suggests the need for operative intervention
  • Patients with significant rib fractures should be admitted for pain control:
    • Consider epidural catheter for analgesia
  • Patients who lose vital signs in the ED should undergo rapid open thoracotomy

Discharge Criteria

The NEXUS Chest criteria can be used to help identify low-risk patients who can be safely discharged with a normal CXR - absence of all NEXUS criteria had a sensitivity of 99.2% (NPV 99.8%) for major injury and a sensitivity 95.4% (NPV 93.9%) for any clinically significant injury

  • Alternatively, patients with clinically insignificant chest wall contusions and an initial negative upright CXR may be observed for 6 hr in the ED and often be discharged if a repeat radiograph at that time reveals no pneumothorax, hemothorax, or pulmonary contusion, the patient is able to breathe deeply and to cough, remains clinically stable, and has no other significant injuries

Issues for Referral

  • Notify trauma surgeon promptly about patients with significant injuries requiring surgical intervention or admission
  • Indications for emergent surgical referral:
    • Traumatic thoracotomy with loss of chest wall integrity
    • Blunt diaphragmatic injuries
    • Massive air leak following chest tube insertion
    • Massive hemothorax or continued high rate of blood loss via the chest tube (i.e., 1,500 mL on insertion of tube or continued loss of 200-300 mL/hr)
    • Radiographically or endoscopically confirmed tracheal, major bronchial, or esophageal injury
    • GI tract contents recovered on chest tube placement
    • Cardiac tamponade
    • Radiographic confirmation of a great-vessel injury
    • Embolism or missile into pulmonary artery, great vessel, or heart

Follow-up Recommendations!!navigator!!

Pearls and Pitfalls

  • Blunt chest trauma is responsible for up to 1/4 of all trauma-related deaths
  • Trauma patients arriving at a nontrauma center should be stabilized and transferred to facilities that can provide definitive care as soon as possible
  • Open thoracotomy in the ED has not been shown to improve survival in patients found to be in cardiopulmonary arrest after blunt trauma and is generally only indicated if the patient arrives in the ED with vital signs present
  • The extent of injury is not always clinically obvious upon initial presentation. This is particularly true in pediatric patients

Additional Reading

Codes

ICD9

ICD10

SNOMED