Pneumothorax Flashcards

1
Q

Describe a pneumothorax

A

air in the pleural space
=> partial or complete collapse of the affected lung.

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2
Q

Describe who normally develops a Primary Spontaneous Pneumothorax (PSP)

A
  • No underlying lung disease
  • often tall, thin, young men
  • associated with the rupture of subpleural blebs or bullae.
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3
Q

Describe who normally develops a Secondary Spontaneous Pneumothorax

A
  • patients with pre-existing lung disease (COPD, asthma, CF, Lung ca, Pneumocystis pneumonia)
  • Connective tissue diseases (e.g. Marfan’s) are also a risk factor
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4
Q

Describe what is meant by a traumatic pneumothorax

A
  • penetrating or blunt chest trauma
    => lung injury and pleural air accumulation.
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5
Q

What could cause an iatrogenic pneumothorax

A

complication of medical procedures:
- Thoracentesis
- central venous catheter placement
- ventilation (and NIV)
- lung biopsy

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6
Q

What happens in a tension pnuemothorax?

A

severe pneumothorax causing displacement of mediastinal structures

=>severe respiratory distress and haemodynamic collapse.

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7
Q

What is a Catamenial pneumothorax?

A

spontaneous pneumothorax occurring in menstruating women

thought to be caused by endometriosis within the thorax

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8
Q

Describe the sudden onset symptoms seen in pneumothorax

A

dyspnoea
pleuritic chest pain

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9
Q

Signs on examination

A

hyper-resonant lung percussion
reduced breath sounds
reduced lung expansion
tachypnoea
tachycardia
respiratory distress
tracheal deviation away from the side of the pneumothorax
hypotension

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10
Q

Management options in pneumothorax

A

Conservative if minimally symptomatic

Needle aspiration is advised for primary spontaneous pneumothorax if rapid symptom relief required

Tube drainage is recommended for secondary spontaneous pneumothorax

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11
Q

What high-risk characteristics would favour insertion of a chest drain as management?

A
  • Haemodynamic compromise (tension pneumothorax)
  • Significant hypoxia
  • Bilateral pneumothorax
  • Underlying lung disease
  • ≥ 50 years of age with significant smoking history
  • Haemothorax
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12
Q

If we opt for conservative management in a spontaneous pneumothorax, how regularly should patients be followed-up?

A

PSP - review as OP (every 2-4 days)

SSP - monitor as IP
- once stable, review as OP in 2-4 weeks time

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13
Q

Patients can be discharged following needle aspiration of a pneumothorax if it is successful. TRUE/FALSE?

A

TRUE
if successful (i.e. improved symptoms or resolution on CXR)
discharge and review in OP department in 2-4 weeks time.

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14
Q

What management should be used if needle aspiration is unsuccessful

A

Insert chest drain

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15
Q

Techniques for pneumothorax prevention

A

Chemical pleurodesis

Thoracic surgery if recurrence prevention is necessary
- video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) to allow for mechanical/chemical pleurodesis +/- bullectomy.

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16
Q

What 3 things should be avoided following pneumothorax

A
  • Smoking
  • scuba diving
  • Flying (Patients may be fit to fly after 2 weeks if no residual air seen on CXR after successful drainage)
17
Q
A