| Literature DB >> 33437774 |
Brian Housman1, Adam Jacobi2, Andrea Carollo1, Tamar Nobel1, Corey Eber2, Samuel Acquah3, Charles Powell3, Andrew Kaufman1, Dong-Seok Lee1, Daniel Nicastri1, Ardeshir Hakami1, Kimberly Song1, Roopa Kohli-Seth4, Raja Flores1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: COVID-19 patients requiring mechanical ventilation may develop significant pneumomediastinum and sub-cutaneous emphysema without associated pneumothorax (SWAP). Prophylactic chest tube placement or sub-fascial "blowholes" are usually recommended to prevent tension pneumothorax and clinical decline. Risk of iatrogenic lung injury and release of virus into the environment is high. Incidence and conservative management data of such barotraumatic complications during the COVID-19 pandemic are lacking.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; barotrauma; pulmonary critical care; radiology; thoracic surgery
Year: 2020 PMID: 33437774 PMCID: PMC7791221 DOI: 10.21037/atm-20-3907
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Transl Med ISSN: 2305-5839
Patient information
| Characteristic | Data |
|---|---|
| Patient demographics | |
| Total SWAP patients | 29 |
| Male | 21 (72.4%) |
| Female | 8 (27.6%) |
| Age | 55 (IQR, 42–63) |
| Past medical history | |
| No past medical history | 10 (34.5%) |
| Hypertension | 8 (27.6%) |
| Asthma | 6 (20.7%) |
| COPD | 1 (3.4%) |
| Diabetes | 7 (24.1%) |
| Coronary artery disease | 2 (6.9%) |
| Obesity | 15 (51.7%) |
| Average BMI | 30.8 (IQR, 26.3–32.7) |
| Clinical features and outcomes | |
| PIP | 32 (range, 24–38) |
| MAP | 21 (range, 15–24) |
| PEEP | 13 (range, 10–15) |
| Massive SQE | 23 (79.3%) |
| Sub-massive SQE | 6 (20.7%) |
| Improvement in SQE | 12 (41.4%) |
| Progression to pneumothorax | 2 (6.9%) |
SWAP, sub-cutaneous emphysema without associated pneumothorax; IQR, interquartile range; PMH, past medical history; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; BMI, body mass index; PIP, peak inspiratory pressure; MAP, mean airway pressure; PEEP, positive end expiratory pressure; SQE, sub-cutaneous emphysema.
Figure 1(A) Chest X-ray showing massive sub-cutaneous emphysema, read as having a “small apical pneumothorax.” Note there is no component in the lateral aspect of the chest. (B) Radiograph of the same patient four hours later without a pneumothorax.
Figure 2Characteristic CT of the Chest showing extensive bilateral ground-glass opacities, subcutaneous emphysema and mediastinal air, but no pneumothorax.