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Published byJennifer Pope Modified over 9 years ago
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Pneumothorax MR 8/17/09 J.Chen
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Chest Pain Differential Diagnosis Musculoskeletal Cardiac Gastrointestinal Respiratory Psychogenic Miscellaneous
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Musculoskeletal Chest Wall Strain Costochondritis Direct Chest truama
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Cardiac Arryhthmia SVT PVC Coronary Artery Aneurysm Infection Myocarditis Pericarditis Myocardial Infarction/Ischemia Structural abnormalities Aortic Stenosis Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Pulmonic Stenosis Mitral Valve Prolapse Severe Coarctation of the aorta
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Gastrointestinal Caustic Ingestion Esophageal foreign body Esophagitis GERD
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Respiratory Asthma Cough Pleural Effusion Pneumonia Pneumothorax Pneumomediastinum Pulmonary Embolism
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Psychogenic Anxiety Hyperventilation
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Miscellaneous Breast Mass Shingles Sickle Cell Crisis Thoracic Tumor
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Pneumothorax Presence of air between the visceral and parietal pleura that leads to lung collapse
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Pneumothorax Traumatic Iatrogenic Spontaneous Primary Secondary
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Traumatic Pneumothorax Penetrating Trauma (eg Bullet, Knife) Air entering pleural space directly through chest wall Blunt Trauma Rib Fracture Alveolar rupture from sudden compression High Risk Occupations Diving Flying
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Iatrogenic Pneumothorax Transthoracic Needle Aspiration biopsy Transbronchial Biopsy Thracentesis Central Venous Catheter Placement Intercostal Nerve Block Tracheostomy CPR Positive Pressure Ventillation NG tube placement
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Spontaneous Pneumothorax Due to rupture of apical Blebs PSP-Pt do not have clinically apparent lung disease Subpleural bullae found in 76-100% of patients undergoing VATS
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Risk Factors-PSP Smoking Tall, Thin stature Marfan Birt-Hogg Syndrome-AD, characterized by benign skin tumors, renal/colon cancer, Sp PTX Pregnancy Familial PTX
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Conditions Associated with SSP Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease Asthma Tuberculosis Cystic Fibrosis Marijuana, Cocaine HIV/AIDS with PCP infection Necrotizing PNA Bronchogenic Carcinoma Metastatic Malignancy Sarcoidosis Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis ARDS
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History Usually occur while at rest Acute onset of chest pain Severe Stabbing Radiates to ipsilateral shoulder Pleuritic Sudden onset of SOB Anxiety Cough Dyspnea
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Physical Exam Vital Signs: Tachypnea Tachycardia Hypotension Hypoxia Pulsus Paradoxus General Appearance Diaphoretic Splinting Cyanotic
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Physical Exam Respiratory Decreased Breath Sounds Hyperresonance to percussion Decreased Tactile Fremitus “Scratch Sign” Cardiovascular JVD Shift in PMI Other Subcutaneous Emphysema Shifted Trachea Altered Mental Status
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Laboratory Studies ABG PO2 frequently decreased Increased A-a gradient PCO2: Elevated with respiratory compromise Decreased from Hyperventilation
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Imaging CXR-confirmatory CT Useful for finding small pneumothoraces Distinguish PTX from bleb or cyst Locating small blebs US Increasing in use 95%sensitivity, 100%specificity
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CT Scan
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Managment Small PTX (<3cm): Observation High Flow O2 No further management if CXR in 24 hr is small/stable
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Management Large PTX Hospitalization Chest tube +/- suction until lung reexpands and air leak resolves Chemical Pleuredesis Talc Bleomycin, tetracycline, povidone iodine Video Assisted Thorascopic Surgery (VATS) Removal of Blebs Surgical pleurodesis Attach lung to intrathoracic chest wall Mechanical abrasion of the lung
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Pleur-Evac
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Recurrence rate based on intervention Overall between 16-52%
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