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Cracked Ribs and Sucking Holes
Carrie Valdez, MD Trauma and Acute Care Surgeon, Covenant Hospital cell
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Pre-hospital 35F MVC- unrestrained, single passenger, head-on into tree EMS On scene, GCS 15 Vitals stable and normal Transferred to Critical Access Hospital Diagnosis Liver laceration, R acetabulum fx, scalp lac, rib fractures, R foot laceration Transfer to Covenant Hospital- Level 2 trauma center
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Transfer Arrival: Labs: Imaging reviewed- appropriate care at OSH
afebrile, BP 161/89, HR 81, O2 sat 96% on 4L NC, RR 28 Labs: H/H 13/39 EtOH 0 (per pt, drank 5 beers over 7 hours prior to MVA) Imaging reviewed- appropriate care at OSH Transferred to NTICU Dr. Valdez, critical care consultation Dr. Tucker, orthopedic consultation
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Cracked Ribs
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Rib fractures- how can they kill you?
Respiratory failure Pneumothorax (rare) Pain and progressive loss of tidal volume Paradoxical movement of chest wall and loss of bellows Increased intrapulmonary shunt and V/Q mismatch Worsened by aggressive fluid resuscitation PNEUMONIA
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Rib fractures- how can they kill you?
Jones et al. Am J Surg. 2011; 202:
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Rib Fracture Pattern: Flail Chest
Synergistic effect- increase age with morbidity and mortality N=277, 10 years, Bulger EM. J Trauma 48: , 2000. 7
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Rib fractures - treatment
Pain control Mechanical ventilation needed - Loss of tidal volume/minute ventilation due to pain - O2 failure due to shunting Surgical rib fixation Minimal fluid resuscitation
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Covenant Hospital Rib Fracture CPG
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Covenant Hospital Rib Fracture CPG
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Surgical rib fixation - data
Meta analysis of 11 studies (2 RCT): Significant decreases in: Mean ventilator days Mean ICU days Hospital days Risk of pneumonia Risk of septicemia Risk of mortality Rates of tracheostomy Chest deformity Slobogean et al. JACS 2013; 216:302
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Surgical rib fixation- other considerations
Marasco, Tanaka, and Bhatnagar all analyzed cost Found a $2,000-$14,000 decrease in medical costs in patients undergoing surgical fixation Despite cost of surgery, decreased ICU time and decreased complication rates made operative management less expensive
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Which Ribs Should We Fix?
Most effective for ribs 4-8 Consider ribs 3-9 Fix flail segments Fix displaced segments
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Surgical rib fixation - timing
Vital capacity < 55% of predicted “Take a deep breath” or “cough” Inability to talk in full sentences “I’m ok so long as I don’t move” Timing of procedure: EARLY
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Hospital course HD2: HDS, no evidence of hemorrhage from liver laceration HD3: Dr. Tucker: ORIF R acetabulum Dr. Valdez: ORIF L ribs
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RibLoc System Locking screws. Not dependent on bone quality
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Our patient Left rib fractures #3-8
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Our patient Right rib fractures #3-7
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Our patient Intraop
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Our patient Post op CXR
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Post-op Rapidly improved respiratory mechanics Decreased narcotic use
Transferred to rehab Follow up in trauma clinic “My ribs feel stable. I’m able to use my crutches.”
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Take away points Rib fractures require appropriate pain control
Rib fractures require pulmonary toilet Rib plating is a very useful adjunct for pain control Shortens length of mechanical ventilation Shortens length of stay Most important ribs are #4-8
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Sucking holes
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What is a pneumothorax?
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What is a TENSION pneumothorax?
Inspiration Expiration
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What to do about it = CHEST TUBE
Bedside procedure under local anesthetic Insertion of chest tube between 4th or 5th intercostal space Approximately nipple line Negative pressure suction chamber
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Chest tube placement
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Chest tube placed
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Dazed and Confused…
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Cracked Ribs and Sucking Holes
Carrie Valdez, MD Trauma and Acute Care Surgeon, Coven-ant Hospital cell
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