Bhavesh H Patel1, Christopher O Lew1, Tanya Dall1, Craig L Anderson1, Robert Rodriguez2, Mark I Langdorf3,4. 1. University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA. 2. University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA. 3. University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA. milangdo@uci.edu. 4. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine, 333 City Blvd. West, Suite 640, Orange, CA, 92868, USA. milangdo@uci.edu.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Whole-body computed tomography (CT) for blunt trauma patients is common. Chest CT (CCT) identifies "occult" pneumo- (PTX) and hemothorax (HTX) not seen on chest radiograph (CXR), one-third of whom get chest tubes, while CXR identifies "non-occult" PTX/HTX. To assess chest tube value for occult injury vs. expectant management, we compared output, duration, and length of stay (LOS) for chest tubes placed for occult vs. non-occult (CXR-visible) injury. METHODS: We compared chest tube output and duration, and patient length of stay for occult vs. non-occult PTX/HTX. This was a retrospective analysis of 5451 consecutive Level I blunt trauma patients, from 2010 to 2013. RESULTS: Of these blunt trauma patients, 402 patients (7.4%) had PTX, HTX or both, and both CXR and CCT. One third (n = 136, 33.8%) had chest tubes placed in 163 hemithoraces (27 bilateral). Non-occult chest tube output for all patients was 1558 ± 1919 cc (n = 54), similar to occult at 1123 ± 1076 cc (n = 109, p = 0.126). Outputs were similar for HTX-only patients, with non-occult (n = 34) at 1917 ± 2130 cc, vs. occult (n = 54) at 1449 ± 1131 cc (p = 0.24). Chest tube duration for all patients was 6.3 ± 4.9 days for non-occult vs. 5.0 ± 3.3 for occult (p = 0.096). LOS was similar between all occult injury patients (n = 46) and non-occult (n = 90, 17.0 ± 15.8 vs. 13.7 ± 11.9 days, p = 0.23). CONCLUSION: Mature clinical judgment may dictate which patients need chest tubes and explain the similarity between groups.
PURPOSE: Whole-body computed tomography (CT) for blunt traumapatients is common. Chest CT (CCT) identifies "occult" pneumo- (PTX) and hemothorax (HTX) not seen on chest radiograph (CXR), one-third of whom get chest tubes, while CXR identifies "non-occult" PTX/HTX. To assess chest tube value for occult injury vs. expectant management, we compared output, duration, and length of stay (LOS) for chest tubes placed for occult vs. non-occult (CXR-visible) injury. METHODS: We compared chest tube output and duration, and patient length of stay for occult vs. non-occult PTX/HTX. This was a retrospective analysis of 5451 consecutive Level I blunt traumapatients, from 2010 to 2013. RESULTS: Of these blunt traumapatients, 402 patients (7.4%) had PTX, HTX or both, and both CXR and CCT. One third (n = 136, 33.8%) had chest tubes placed in 163 hemithoraces (27 bilateral). Non-occult chest tube output for all patients was 1558 ± 1919 cc (n = 54), similar to occult at 1123 ± 1076 cc (n = 109, p = 0.126). Outputs were similar for HTX-only patients, with non-occult (n = 34) at 1917 ± 2130 cc, vs. occult (n = 54) at 1449 ± 1131 cc (p = 0.24). Chest tube duration for all patients was 6.3 ± 4.9 days for non-occult vs. 5.0 ± 3.3 for occult (p = 0.096). LOS was similar between all occult injurypatients (n = 46) and non-occult (n = 90, 17.0 ± 15.8 vs. 13.7 ± 11.9 days, p = 0.23). CONCLUSION: Mature clinical judgment may dictate which patients need chest tubes and explain the similarity between groups.
Authors: Chad G Ball; Andrew W Kirkpatrick; Kevin B Laupland; Daniel I Fox; Savvas Nicolaou; Ian B Anderson; S Morad Hameed; John B Kortbeek; Robert R Mulloy; Stacey Litvinchuk; Bernard R Boulanger Journal: J Trauma Date: 2005-10