| Literature DB >> 21034445 |
Hesham R Omar1, Hany Abdelmalak, Devanand Mangar, Rania Rashad, Engy Helal, Enrico M Camporesi.
Abstract
Pneumothorax is a recognized cause of preventable death following chest wall trauma where a simple intervention can be life saving. In cases of trauma patients where cervical spine immobilization is mandatory, supine AP chest radiograph is the most practical initial study. It is however not as sensitive as CT chest for early detection of a pneumothorax. "Occult" pneumothorax is an accepted definition of an existing but usually a clinically and radiologically silent disturbance that in most patients can be tolerated while other more urgent trauma needs are attended to. However, in certain patients, especially those on mechanical ventilation (with subsequent increase of intrapleural air with positive pressure ventilation), missing the diagnosis of pneumothorax can be deleterious with fatal consequences. This review will discuss the occult pneumothorax in the context of 3 radiological examples, which will further emphasize the entity. Because a negative AP chest radiograph can dangerously delay its recognition, we recommend that any trauma victim presenting to the emergency department with symptoms of respiratory distress should be screened with either thoracic ultrasonography or chest CT scan to avoid missing a pneumothorax.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21034445 PMCID: PMC2984474 DOI: 10.1186/1752-2897-4-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Trauma Manag Outcomes ISSN: 1752-2897
Figure 1AP chest X-ray revealing no evidence of pneumothorax (Panel A). CT chest performed immediately after X-ray revealed right sided pneumothorax (Panel B).
Figure 2AP chest X-ray revealing evidence of bilateral lung contusions and left subcutaneous emphesema (Panel A). Chest CT confirmed both the lung contusions and the subcutaneous emphesema and demonstrated a left sided pneumothorax not initially appearing on the anteroposterior chest Xray (Panel B).
Secondary Signs of PTXs Identified on Supine AP chest Xray
| Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deep sulcus | 7 | 9 | 3 |
| Crisp cardiac silhouette | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Pleural line | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Adapted from Ball et al. from reference [21].
Figure 3AP chest X-ray of the intubated patient, illustrating diffuse air space opacities in the left lower lung field (Panel A). Underlying pneumothorax was suggested because of a visible pleural stripe in the lung apex and a visible cardiophrenic sulcus. Chest CT scan illustrating a left-sided pneumothorax with underlying lung collapse (Panel B).