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Chest Trauma

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If necessary, epidural anesthesia. If necessary, intercostal nerve block ... undergo an operation under general anaesthesia even when there is neither ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chest Trauma


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Chest Trauma
  • By
  • Dr. Samir Abdallah M.D
  • Prof. of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery
  • Cairo University

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Chest Trauma
Epidemiology
  • The fact that it has become possible in recent
    decades for millions of people to travel at high
    speed had led to a phenomenal increase in blunt
    injury to the chest - a most lethal type of
    injury.

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  • All casualties, and particularly children who
    have been exposed to blunt chest injury may have
    sustained highly lethal internal lesions (rupture
    of the heart, the aorta or the major airway, for
    example, or contusion of the heart although the
    external stigmata of chest injury may be quite
    trivial or even absents altogether.

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  • For this reason any causality who has sustained
    blunt trauma to the chest should be considered
    seriously injured until proved otherwise.

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Frequency of Various InjuriesIn Motor Vehicle
Accidents
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Mechanism of Injury in Chest Trauma
  • Acceleration/deceleration (motor vehicle
    accident)
  • Body compression (crush injury)
  • High-speed impact (gunshot wound)
  • Miscellaneous

Low-velocity penetration (stab wound) Airway
obstruction (suffocation) Caustic injury
(poisoning) Burns Electrocution
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Schematic diagram of the various forms of
thoracic injuries showing how disturbed
cardiopulmonary physiologic equilibrium results
in tissue anoxia acidosis
Blunt or Penetration Trauma
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TRAUMA DEATHS
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Percentage of Specific Types of Thoracic Organ
Injury
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Assessment of patient with Thoracic injury
  • The evaluation of thoracic injuries is only one
    aspect of the total assessment of severely
    injured patients.
  • Both diagnosis and therapy go hand in hand.
  • The basic principle of elective surgery - First
    investigate and make the diagnosis, then treat
    the illness - is a dangerous illusion.

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Assessment of patient with Thoracic injury
  • The first step is to make a rough estimate of
    the status of the circulatory and respiratory
    systems. This provides the first diagnostic clues
    and often determines which therapeutic action is
    to be taken. Specific questions are then posed
    pertaining to individual injuries or their
    consequences.

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TEN QUESTIONS to be asked in the initial
assessment of severe blunt thoracic injuries
  •     1. Hypovolemia?
  •     2. Respiratory insufficiency?
  •     3. Tension pneumothorax?
  •     4. Cardiac tamponade

Immediately life- threatening diagnosis and
therapy before taking roentgenograms
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TEN QUESTIONS to be asked in the initial
assessment of severe blunt thoracic injuries
  • Multiple rib fractures? (Paradoxical
    respiration?)
  • Pneumothorax ? (subcutaneous emphysema?
    mediastinal emphysema?)
  • Hemothorax?
  • Diaphragmatic rupture?
  • Aortic rupture?
  • Cardiac contusion?

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Monitoring and evaluating the patient with
Thoracic trauma
  • Roentgenograms of the thorax (Chest wall i.e.
    ribs, sternum, vertebral, clavicles).
  • Mediastmum (wide or normal) shifted or not.
  • Lung parenchyma (Contusion).
  • The heart (cardiac tamponade).
  • Diaphragm.
  • Pneumothorax, hemothorax.
  • ECG
  • CVP
  • Arterial blood gases.
  • Urine output.
  • Lab. Investigations.
  • Others.

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Management of patients with Thoracic Trauma
  • The treatment of polytraumatized patient must
    follow a certain protocol which includes.
  • Adequate oxygenation.
  • Fluid replacement.
  • Surgical intervention.
  • Treatment of septic complications.
  • Adequate caloric and substrate supplementation.
  • Prevention of stress bleeding.
  • Finally, be alert of possible complication (CNS,
    ARDS, hepatic, renal, coagulation disorders,
    sepsis.

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Rib and Sternal Fracture Mechanism of Injury
Lung injuries are more common
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Rib and Sternal fractures
  • Diagnosis
  • Patient complains of localized pain that is
    aggravated by coughing deep breathing Localised
    tenderness.
  • Subcutaneous emphysema
  • False motion, paradoxical respiration
  • Rib fractures must be diagnosed clinically many
    rib fractures are not visible on X-ray chest.

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Flail Chest
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Therapy in multiple rib fractures (not taking
companion injuries into consideration)
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Intercostal Blocks (Sites)
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  • It is a tried and tested rule that a prophylactic
    chest tube should be inserted in every patient
    with multiple rib fractures who is to undergo an
    operation under general anaesthesia even when
    there is neither evidence of a hemothorax nor of
    a pneumothorax.

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Pneumothorax and Hemothorax
  • Cases of pneumothorax and hemothorax can be
    provided with extremely effective therapy for the
    most part with simple methods, in more than 80
    of cases.
  • It must, however, be given early, furthermore the
    drainage of air and blood must be efficient.

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Tension Pneumothorax (Life Threatening)
  • Every traumatic pneumothorax can develop into
    tension pneumothorax, however, this complication
    is rare with spontaneous breathing.
  • Very frequently, in a more dangerous form by for,
    a tension pneumothorax occurs during mechanical
    ventilation.
  • Treatment consists of immediate relief of
    pressure.

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Open Pneumothorax
  • Diagnosis
  • A penetrating thoracic wound with a sucking sound
    of incoming and outgoing air sucking wound adds
    to the clinical and radiological evidence of
    pneumothorax
  • Therapy
  • Immediate air tight closure of the thoracic
    wound.
  • Immediate intubation and mechanical ventilation.

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Hemothorax
  • Diagnosis
  • Diminished breath sound.
  • Muffled sound on percussion.
  • X-ray chest Clouding of the affected half of the
    thorax up to complete opacity.
  • In the diagnosis of hemothorax formation of
    atelectosis and rupture of the diaphragm should
    be differentiated.

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Sources of blood accumulating in the chest
following blunt or penetrating trauma
Hemothorax
  • Pulmonary parenchymal laceration.
  • Rupture of pleural adhesions.
  • Mediastinal injury with or without vascular
    injury.
  • Cardiac injury with pericardio-pleural
    communication.
  • Decompression of abdominal hemorrhage through a
    traumatic diaphragmatic injury.

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Hemothorax
  • Therapy
  • The key to successful management of acute
    hemothorax is early aggressive care in the form
    of adequate pleural evacuation by thoracostomy or
    thoracotomy in order to minimize the morbidity.
  • The rate and cessation of bleeding depends on the
    site and size of the bleeding wound.

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Hemothorax
  • Thoracotomy is done if the bleeding is constant
    and more than 300 ml per hour during the first
    three to four hours. However, tube thoracotomy is
    all what is needed if bleeding is less and
    decreasing without radiological evidence of
    clotted blood.

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Insertion of Chest Tube
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Lung Parenchymal Injuries
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Lung Parenchymal Injuries
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Lung Parenchymal Injuries
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Lung Parenchymal Injuries
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Lung Parenchymal Injuries
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Lung Parenchymal Injuries
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Abnormalities following bronchial rupture and
methods of management
Mediastinitis Empyema
Atelectasis
Tubes
Emergency Repair or Resection
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Abnormalities following bronchial rupture and
methods of management
Delayed
Pneumonia Abscess
Fibrosis
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Pathologic courses following esophageal
perforation
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Essential components of and procedures used in
management of esophageal perforation
Therapy non-operative
High-dose IV
Topical, Luminal
Gast. Tube
Plus Operative
Prox. Tube
Drainage of Mediastinal and/or fascial planes
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Injuries of the diaphragm
  • Diaphragmatic Rupture
  • Incidence In 3 of all sever thoracic injuries.
  • Mechanism Broad surface blow.
  • Location Left side in 85 of cases.
  • Clinical picture.
  • Acute symptoms of companion injury and shock.
  • Chronic Intestinal obstruction or strangulation
    (usually)

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Diaphragmatic ruptures (Cont.)
  • Radiological Ex. Rupture of the diaphragm are
    frequently overlooked.
  • Therapy Is indicated for increasing impairment
    to respiration.
  • Operative approach from chest or abdomen.

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Traumatic Diaphragmatic Rupture
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Traumatic Emphysema
  • Subcutaneous.
  • Mediastinal Emphysema.
  • Present in about 27 of patients with blunt or
    penetrating chest injury

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Traumatic Emphysema
  • Therapy
  • Despite its impressive appearance the treatment
    of subcutaneous emphysema it self is mostly
    unnecessary.
  • Determite the site of origin.
  • Treat underlying pneumothorax if present by tube
    thoracostomy.
  • Treat tracheobronchial, or oesophageal rupture or
    tension pneumothorax in cases of mediastinal
    emphysema.
  • Rarely, cervical mediastinotomy is needed for
    mediastinal enphysema.

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Non-penetrating wounds of Heart
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Cardiac Tamponade
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Penetrating cardiac injuries (Therapy)
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Penetrating cardiac injuries (Therapy)
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CARDIAC INJURY
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Other Injury Patterns in Thoracic Trauma
  • I. Traumatic asphyxia
  • Due to a severe compression of thorax with sudden
    increase of pressure in the venous system
    resulting in a characteristic injury pattern
    where small hemorrhages in the conjunctiva, the
    skin and the mucous membranes of the throat and
    head and reddish-blue discoloration in the latter
    region.
  • Therapy
  • Is for the companion injuries and cerebral oedema
    if present.

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Other Injury Patterns in Thoracic Trauma
  • II. Injuries of the thoracic duct (Chylothorax)
  • III. Cholothorax
  • IV. Traumatic induced hernia of the chest wall
  • V. Arterial air embolism
  • VI. Blast injury

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Indications for ThoracotomyDecision to Operate
  • Excluding minor surgical procedures such as
    tracheostomy pericardiocentesis, tube
    thoracostomy, and suture of chest wall
    lacerations, formal operations are required in
    only 12 to 15 percent of patients with thoracic
    trauma.

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Indications for thoracotomy ACUTE
  • Post-traumatic cardiovascular collapse
  • Pericardial tamponade
  • Vascular injury to the thoracic outlet
  • Traumatic thoracotomy
  • Massive Air leak
  • Proved tracheobronchial injury
  • Proved Esophageal injury
  • Great vessel injury
  • Continuing Hemothorax
  • Mediastinal traversing injury
  • Bullet Embolism
  • Air Embolism

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Indications for thoracotomy CHRONIC
  • Unevaluated clotted hemothorax
  • Chronic traumatic Diaphragmic hernia
  • Chronic cardiac septal or valvular lesions
  • Chronic false Aneurysms
  • Chronic non-closing thoracic duct fistula
  • Infected intrapulmonary hematoma
  • Missed trachobronchial injury
  • Traumatic Arterio-venous fistula

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Initial Assessment of the most important thoracic
injuries
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Initial Assessment of the most important thoracic
injuries
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Initial Assessment of the most important thoracic
injuries
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Initial Assessment of the most important thoracic
injuries
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Initial Assessment of the most important thoracic
injuries
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