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Pleural effusion

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Title: Pleural effusion


1
  • Pleural effusion

2
  • Definition
  • A pleural effusion is an excessive accumulation
    of fluid in the pleural space. It can be detected
    on X-ray when 300 mL or more of fluid is present
    and clinically when 500 mL or more is present.
  • The chest X-ray appearances range from the
    obliteration of the costophrenic angle to dense
    homogeneous shadows occupying part or all of the
    hemithorax. Fluid in the fissures may resemble an
    intrapulmonary mass.

3
Pleural Effusion on CXR
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Etiology
  • Pleural fluid accumulates when pleural fluid
    formation exceeds pleural fluid absorption.
    Normally, fluid enters the pleural space from the
    capillaries in the parietal pleura and is removed
    via the lymphatics situated in the parietal
    pleura.
  • Fluid can also enter the pleural space from the
    interstitial spaces of the lung via the visceral
    pleura or from the peritoneal cavity via small
    holes in the diaphragm.
  • The lymphatics have the capacity to absorb 20
    times more fluid than is normally formed.
  • Accordingly, a pleural effusion may develop when
    there is excess pleural fluid formation (from the
    interstitial spaces of the lung, the parietal
    pleura, or the peritoneal cavity) or when there
    is decreased fluid removal by the lymphatics.

8
Diagnostic Approach
  • When a patient is found to have a pleural
    effusion, an effort should be made to determine
    the cause. The first step is to determine whether
    the effusion is a transudate or an exudate.
  • 1-A transudative pleural effusion occurs when
    systemic factors that influence the formation and
    absorption of pleural fluid are altered.
  • The leading causes of transudative pleural
    effusions are lt. ventricular failure
    cirrhosis.

9
  • 2-An exudative pleural effusion occurs when local
    factors that influence the formation absorption
    of pleural fluid are altered.
  • The leading causes of exudative pleural effusions
    are bacterial pneumonia, malignancy, viral
    infection, pulmonary embolism.
  • The primary reason to make this differentiation
    is that additional diagnostic procedures are
    indicated with exudative effusions to define the
    cause of the local disease.

10
  • Transudative exudative pleural effusions are
    distinguished by measuring the lactate
    dehydrogenase (LDH) protein levels in the
    pleural fluid. Exudative pleural effusions meet
    at least one of the following criteria, whereas
    transudative pleural effusions meet none
  • pleural fluid LDH/serum LDH gt0.6
  • pleural fluid protein/serum protein gt0.5
  • pleural fluid LDH more than two-thirds normal
    upper limit for serum

11
  • The above criteria misidentify 25 of
    transudates as exudates. If one or more of the
    exudative criteria are met and the patient is
    clinically thought to have a condition producing
    a transudative effusion, the difference between
    the protein levels in the serum the pleural
    fluid should be measured.
  • If this gradient is greater than 3.1 g/dL. the
    exudative categorization by the above criteria
    can be ignored because almost all such patients
    have a transudative pleural effusion.

12
  • If a patient has an exudative pleural effusion,
    the following tests on the pleural fluid should
    be obtained description of the fluid, glucose
    level, differential cell count, microbiologic
    studies cytology.

13
Effusion Due to Heart Failure
  • The most common cause of pleural effusion is lt.
    ventricular failure. The effusion occurs because
    the increased amounts of fluid in the lung
    interstitial spaces exit in part across the
    visceral pleura. This overcomes the capacity of
    the lymphatics in the parietal pleura to remove
    fluid.
  • Isolated right-sided pleural effusions are more
    common than left-sided effusions in heart
    failure.

14
  • A diagnostic thoracentesis should be performed if
    the effusions are not bilateral comparable in
    size, if the patient is febrile, or if the
    patient has pleuritic chest pain, to verify that
    the patient has a transudative effusion.
  • The patient is best treated with diuretics. If
    the effusion persists despite diuretic therapy, a
    diagnostic thoracentesis should be performed.

15
Hepatic Hydrothorax
  • Pleural effusions occur in 5 of patients with
    cirrhosis ascites.
  • The predominant mechanism is the direct movement
    of peritoneal fluid through small openings in the
    diaphragm into the pleural space.
  • The effusion is usually right-sided frequently
    is large enough to produce severe dyspnea.

16
Parapneumonic Effusion
  • Parapneumonic effusions are associated with
    bacterial pneumonia, lung abscess, or
    bronchiectasis. Empyema refers to a grossly
    purulent effusion.
  • Patients with aerobic bacterial pneumonia
    pleural effusion present with an acute febrile
    illness consisting of chest pain, sputum
    production, leukocytosis.
  • Patients with anaerobic infections present with a
    subacute illness with weight loss, a brisk
    leukocytosis, mild anemia, a history of some
    factor that predisposes them to aspiration.

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  • The possibility of a parapneumonic effusion
    should be considered whenever a patient with a
    bacterial pneumonia is initially evaluated.
  • If the free fluid separates the lung from the
    chest wall by gt10 mm, a therapeutic thoracentesis
    should be performed. Factors indicating the
    likely need for a procedure more invasive than a
    thoracentesis include loculated pleural fluid,
    positive Gram stain or culture of the pleural
    fluid, or the presence of gross pus in the
    pleural space.

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  • If the fluid recurs after the initial therapeutic
    thoracentesis, if any of the above
    characteristics are present, a repeat
    thoracentesis should be performed.
  • If the fluid cannot be completely removed with
    the therapeutic thoracentesis, consideration
    should be given to inserting a chest tube
    instilling a fibrinolytic (e.g., streptokinase,
    250,000 units) or performing thoracoscopy with
    the breakdown of adhesions.
  • Decortication should be considered when the above
    are ineffective.

19
Effusion Secondary to Malignancy
  • Malignant pleural effusions secondary to
    metastatic disease are the second most common
    type of exudative pleural effusion.
  • The three tumors that cause 75 of all
    malignant pleural effusions are lung carcinoma,
    breast carcinoma lymphoma.
  • Patients complain of dyspnea, which is
    frequently out of proportion to the size of the
    effusion.
  • The pleural fluid is an exudate, its glucose
    level may be reduced if the tumor burden in the
    pleural space is high.
  • The diagnosis is usually made via cytology of the
    pleural fluid needle biopsy of the pleura .

20
Treatment
  • The only symptom that can be attributed to the
    effusion itself is dyspnea.
  • If the patient's lifestyle is compromised by
    dyspnea if the dyspnea is relieved with a
    therapeutic thoracentesis, then one of the
    following procedures should be considered
  • Insertion of a small indwelling catheter.
  • Tube thoracostomy with the instillation of a
    sclerosing agent such as doxycycline, 500 mg.

21
Mesothelioma
  • Malignant mesotheliomas are primary tumors that
    arise from the mesothelial cells that line the
    pleural cavities most are related to asbestos
    exposure.
  • Patients with mesothelioma present with chest
    pain shortness of breath.
  • The chest radiograph reveals a pleural effusion,
    generalized pleural thickening, a shrunken
    hemithorax.
  • Thoracoscopy or open pleural biopsy is usually
    necessary to establish the diagnosis.
  • Chest pain should be treated with opiates
    shortness of breath with oxygen and/or opiates.

22
Tuberculous Pleuritis
  • In many parts of the world, the most common cause
    of an exudative pleural effusion is tuberculosis
    (TB).
  • Tuberculous pleural effusions are usually
    associated with primary TB are thought to be
    due primarily to a hypersensitivity reaction to
    tuberculous protein in the pleural space.
  • Patients with tuberculous pleuritis present with
    fever, weight loss, dyspnea /or pleuritic chest
    pain.
  • The pleural fluid is an exudate with
    predominantly small lymphocytes.

23
  • The diagnosis is established by demonstrating
    high levels of TB markers in the pleural fluid
    (adenosine deaminase gt 40 IU/L, interferon gt
    140 pg/mL, or positive polymerase chain reaction
    (PCR) for tuberculous DNA).
  • Alternatively, the diagnosis can be established
    by culture of the pleural fluid, needle biopsy of
    the pleura, or thoracoscopy.
  • The recommended treatment of pleural pulmonary
    TB is identical .

24
Chylothorax
  • A chylothorax occurs when the thoracic duct is
    disrupted chyle accumulates in the pleural
    space.
  • The most common cause of chylothorax is trauma,
    but it also may result from tumors in the
    mediastinum.
  • Patients with chylothorax present with dyspnea,
    a large pleural effusion is present on the
    chest radiograph.
  • Thoracentesis reveals milky fluid biochemical
    analysis reveals a triglyceride level that
    exceeds 110mg/dL.

25
  • Patients with chylothorax no obvious trauma
    should have a lymphangiogram a mediastinal CT
    scan to assess the mediastinum for lymph nodes.
  • The treatment of choice for most chylothoraces is
    insertion of a chest tube.
  • If these modalities fail, a pleuroperitoneal
    shunt should be placed unless the patient has
    chylous ascites.
  • Patients with chylothoraces should not undergo
    prolonged tube thoracostomy with chest tube
    drainage because this will lead to malnutrition
    and immunologic incompetence.

26
Hemothorax
  • When a diagnostic thoracentesis reveals bloody
    pleural fluid, a hematocrit should be obtained on
    the pleural fluid. If the hematocrit is more than
    half of that in the peripheral blood, the patient
    is considered to have a hemothorax.
  • Most hemothoraces are the result of trauma
    other causes include rupture of a blood vessel or
    tumor.
  • Most patients with hemothorax should be treated
    with tube thoracostomy, which allows continuous
    quantification of bleeding. If the pleural
    hemorrhage exceeds 200 mL/h, consideration should
    be given to thoracoscopy or thoracotomy.

27
Miscellaneous Causes of Pleural Effusion
  • There are many other causes of pleural effusion.
    Key features of some of these conditions are as
    follows
  • If the pleural fluid amylase level is elevated,
    the diagnosis of esophageal rupture or pancreatic
    disease is likely.
  • If the patient is febrile, has predominantly
    polymorphonuclear cells in the pleural fluid, and
    has no pulmonary parenchymal abnormalities, an
    intraabdominal abscess should be considered.
  • Benign ovarian tumors can produce ascites a
    pleural effusion (Meigs' syndrome).

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  • Several drugs can cause pleural effusion the
    associated fluid is usually eosinophilic
    eg,(Nitrofurantoin, Bromocriptine Amiodarone).
  • Pleural effusions commonly occur following
    coronary artery bypass surgery.
  • Other medical manipulations that induce pleural
    effusions include abdominal surgery radiation
    therapy liver, lung, or heart transplantation
    or the intravascular insertion of central lines.
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