| Literature DB >> 22536502 |
Ankur Girdhar1, Adil Shujaat, Abubakr Bajwa.
Abstract
Pleural effusions can present in 40% of patients with pneumonia. Presence of an effusion can complicate the diagnosis as well as the management of infection in lungs and pleural space. There has been an increase in the morbidity and mortality associated with parapneumonic effusions and empyema. This calls for employment of advanced treatment modalities and development of a standardized protocol to manage pleural sepsis early. There has been an increased understanding about the indications and appropriate usage of procedural options at clinicians' disposal.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22536502 PMCID: PMC3317076 DOI: 10.1155/2012/816502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pulm Med ISSN: 2090-1844
Pleural infections staging and recommended drainage [7].
| Category | Pleural space anatomy | Pleural fluid chemistry | Risk of poor outcome | Drainage | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Minimal free-flowing effusion (<10 mm on lateral decubitus) | and | Gram stain and culture results unknown | Very low | No |
| 2 | Small to moderate free-flowing effusion (≥10 mm and less than one half hemithorax) | and | Negative Gram stain and culture | Low | No |
| 3 | Large, free-flowing effusion (≥ one half hemithorax), loculated effusion, or effusion with thickened parietal pleura | or | Positive Gram stain and/or culture | Moderate | Yes |
| 4 | Empyema | pus | High | Yes |
Different stages in the evolution of an infected pleural effusion with associated pathological changes and pleural fluid findings.
| Phase | Pathology | Pleural fluid findings |
|---|---|---|
| Exudative | Increased permeability of vascular and visceral pleural membranes VEGF | Nonviscous |
| Free flowing | ||
| Readily drained | ||
| Pleural fluid Cx negative | ||
|
| ||
| Fibrinopurulent | Fibrin deposition on visceral pleura Locules formation IL-8, TNF- | pH > 7.20 |
| Glucose within normal ranges | ||
| LDH < 3 times ULN | ||
| Viscous | ||
| More viscous | ||
| Pleural fluid cx positive | ||
| Typical “complicated” effusion | ||
|
| ||
| Organizing | Fibroblast entry Pleural peel | Thick pus |
| Very viscous | ||
| pH < 7.20 | ||
| Glucose < 40 | ||
| LDH > 3 times ULN | ||
LDH: lactate dehydrogenase.
ULN: upper limits of normal.
VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor.
IL-8: interleukin 8.
TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor-alpha.
TGF-β: transforming growth factor-beta.
Figure 1A series of CT images done in patient with parapneumonic effusions. (a) CT image showing a free flowing pleural effusion (r) with a meniscus formation (arrow). There is also some fluid in the fissure on the left side (L). (b) A loculated pleural effusion with loculations seen in the pleural space (arrows). (c) A chronic pleural effusion showing marked pleural thickening (arrows).
Figure 2CT images after chest tube drainage. (a) Image shows placement of pigtail catheter (arrow) in the posterior recess confirmed with CT. (b) Placement of small-bore pigtail catheter (arrowheads) in the small loculated effusion with the help of CT guidance.
Figure 3A pictorial representation of a chronic indwelling catheter (Aspira) which is tunneled beneath the skin to enter the pleural cavity at a distant site. This assembly prevents introduction of infection in the pleural cavity and can provide long term drainage of infected pleural effusion.
Various intrapleural fibrinolytics (Adapted from Colice et al. [7]).
| Fibrinolytic | Dose | Instillation | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Streptokinase | 250,000 IU | 100–200 cc NS | QD for up to 7 days |
| Urokinase | 10,000 IU | 100 cc NS | QD for up to 3 days |
| t-PA | 10–25 mg | 100 cc NS | BID for up to 5 days |
t-PA: tissue plasminogen activator.
IU: international units.
NS: normal saline.
QD: every day.
BID: twice a day.
Figure 4Thoracoscopic views of a complicated parapneumonic effusion. Multiple pleural adhesions (black arrowheads) are seen which prevent lungs from re-expanding. There are also seen inflamed pleura (white arrowheads) which represent nonresolving infection.
Figure 5A schematic flow chart summarizing the various treatment modalities available for managing pleural infection and various stages where each of them may be used. Decisions regarding timing of each treatment option may vary according to institutional expertise. *Empyema or effusions with either gram stain or culture positive, pH < 7.2, glucose < 60 mg/dL, LDH < 1000.