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Chest Trauma Imaging

Chest Trauma Imaging

Chest Trauma Imaging

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Initial Scan & Scope - Trauma Triage Tools

  • Primary Survey (ABCDE): Crucial first step. Imaging aids 'B' (Breathing - pneumothorax) & 'C' (Circulation - hemothorax, tamponade).
  • eFAST (Extended FAST): Bedside ultrasound for immediate life-threats: pneumothorax, hemothorax, pericardial effusion.
    • 📌 Key Chest Views: Bilateral anterior & lateral thoracic scans (parasternal, midclavicular, axillary lines).
    • Findings:
      • Pneumothorax: Absent lung sliding ("barcode sign" on M-mode); lung point (pathognomonic, confirms PTX).
      • Hemothorax: Anechoic/hypoechoic fluid in pleural space.

    ⭐ eFAST has a high specificity but moderate sensitivity for detecting pneumothorax and hemothorax in trauma patients.

  • Chest X-Ray (CXR - AP Supine): Initial, widely available.
    • Limitations: Supine position hinders detection (small pneumothorax, layering effusions), magnification.
    • Key Findings: Pneumothorax, hemothorax, widened mediastinum (aortic injury soft sign: >8cm), fractures, contusions. eFAST probe positions for chest trauma ultrasound
  • MDCT Chest: Gold standard for definitive diagnosis of complex injuries.
    • Indications: High-energy trauma, abnormal/equivocal CXR/eFAST, suspected vascular (CTA), tracheobronchial, diaphragmatic injury.
    • Protocols: Whole-body CT (WBCT) for polytrauma; CTA for arterial injury.

Ribs, Air & Blood - Walls & Linings

  • Rib Fractures: Most common chest trauma.

    • Complications: Pulmonary contusion, neurovascular/visceral injury.
    • Associated injuries by location:
      RibsAssociated Injury Potential
      1-3Major vascular (subclavian), brachial plexus, lung
      4-8Lung (pneumothorax, contusion)
      9-12Liver, spleen, kidneys (solid abdominal organs)

    ⭐ First and second rib fractures are markers of severe trauma and have a high association with vascular and brachial plexus injuries.

  • Flail Chest:

    • Definition: ≥3 consecutive ribs fractured in ≥2 places.
    • Key sign: Paradoxical chest wall movement.
    • Often requires mechanical ventilation. CT scan showing flail segment
  • Sternal Fractures:

    • High-energy trauma; suspect cardiac/aortic injury (ECG, enzymes, CT aortogram).
  • Scapular Fractures:

    • Marker of significant trauma force; associated injuries common.
  • Pneumothorax (Air in Pleural Space):

    • Simple: Air, no mediastinal shift.
    • Tension: Medical emergency!
      • Signs: Hypotension, JVD, tracheal deviation (away), ↓air entry.
      • Imaging: CXR (visceral line, deep sulcus), CT (most sensitive). CXR showing tension pneumothorax with mediastinal shift
      • Needle Decompression: 2nd ICS MCL or 5th ICS AAL/MAL.
    • Occult: Seen on CT, not CXR.
  • Hemothorax (Blood in Pleural Space):

    • Imaging: CXR (meniscus, opacification), CT.
    • Massive Hemothorax:
      • 1500ml initial drainage.

      • OR >200ml/hr for 2-4 hours.
      • Requires urgent thoracotomy.

Lungs, Airways & Great Vessels - Deep Impact Damage

  • Pulmonary Contusion: Most common. Lung "bruising"; opacities on CXR/CT (ground-glass, consolidation). Appears <6 hrs, resolves 3-7 days. CT Chest Trauma: Aortic Injury and Pulmonary Contusion
  • Pulmonary Laceration/Hematoma: Parenchymal tear. CT: air/fluid-filled cavities, hematoma.
  • Tracheobronchial Injury (TBI): Rare, high mortality. Persistent pneumothorax despite chest tube.

    ⭐ The 'fallen lung' sign on CXR is highly suggestive of a major tracheobronchial injury.

  • Aortic & Great Vessel Injury:
    • Mechanisms: Deceleration, penetrating.
    • 📌 CT Signs: Direct (Intimal flap, Pseudoaneurysm, Active extravasation, Irregular contour); Indirect (Mediastinal hematoma >1cm, periaortic hematoma).
  • Diaphragmatic Rupture: More common on left (~90%). "Collar sign" (constriction of herniated organ). Herniation of abdominal contents.
  • Esophageal Injury: Rare. Odynophagia, hematemesis, mediastinal air. Gastrografin swallow or CT with oral contrast.
  • Cardiac Injury: Blunt Cardiac Injury (BCI) spectrum. Tamponade risk. CT: pericardial effusion, myocardial hematoma.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • CXR is first-line for detecting pneumothorax, hemothorax, and rib fractures.
  • CT Chest is the gold standard for detailed evaluation, especially in polytrauma or equivocal CXR.
  • Tension pneumothorax: Look for mediastinal shift away from the affected side.
  • Aortic injury: Widened mediastinum on CXR is a critical sign; CTA confirms.
  • Pulmonary contusion: Patchy opacities appearing ~6 hours post-trauma, typically resolving in 3-7 days.
  • Diaphragmatic rupture: More common on the left; suspect with bowel sounds in chest or NG tube coiled in thorax.
  • Flail chest: ≥3 consecutive ribs fractured in ≥2 places leading to paradoxical chest wall movement.

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