Chest Trauma Indian Medical PG Practice Questions and MCQs
Practice Indian Medical PG questions for Chest Trauma. These multiple choice questions (MCQs) cover important concepts and help you prepare for your exams.
Chest Trauma Indian Medical PG Question 1: Thoracotomy is indicated in all the following conditions except:
- A. Rapidly accumulating haemothorax
- B. Massive air leak
- C. Pulmonary contusion (Correct Answer)
- D. Penetrating chest injuries
Chest Trauma Explanation: ***Pulmonary contusion***
- **Pulmonary contusion** is a bruise of the lung parenchyma that typically resolves with **supportive care** (oxygen, fluid management, analgesia, respiratory support) [1].
- It is generally *not* an indication for thoracotomy and is managed **conservatively** in most cases [1].
- Surgical intervention is only considered if complicated by other issues such as **uncontrolled hemorrhage**, massive hemothorax, or other injuries requiring exploration.
*Penetrating chest injuries*
- While approximately **85% of penetrating chest injuries** are managed conservatively with tube thoracostomy alone, **selective indications** for thoracotomy include:
- **Cardiac tamponade** or suspected cardiac injury
- **Great vessel injury** with hemodynamic instability
- **Massive initial hemothorax** (>1500 mL) or persistent bleeding (>200 mL/hr)
- **Trans-mediastinal trajectory** with suspected esophageal or major vascular injury
- The key is that *specific criteria* determine need for thoracotomy, not the penetrating injury itself.
*Rapidly accumulating haemothorax*
- A **rapidly accumulating haemothorax** with **>1500 mL initial output** or **>200 mL/hour for 2-4 consecutive hours** indicates significant ongoing intrathoracic bleeding.
- This is an **absolute indication** for thoracotomy for **source identification and hemorrhage control** [2].
- Without surgical intervention, such bleeding leads to **hemodynamic instability**, shock, and death.
*Massive air leak*
- A **massive persistent air leak** from chest tube, unresponsive to initial management, suggests a large **tracheobronchial injury** or major lung parenchymal disruption [3].
- This persistent leak prevents **lung re-expansion** and adequate ventilation.
- Thoracotomy is indicated for **surgical repair** of the damaged bronchus, major airway, or extensive lung laceration [2].
Chest Trauma Indian Medical PG Question 2: Which of the following injuries is the most serious?
- A. Open pneumothorax (sucking chest wound) (Correct Answer)
- B. Flail chest (multiple rib fractures with paradoxical movement)
- C. Diaphragmatic injury (rupture of the diaphragm)
- D. Single rib fracture (isolated rib injury)
Chest Trauma Explanation: ***Open pneumothorax (sucking chest wound)***
- An **open pneumothorax** allows air to enter and exit the pleural space directly through a chest wall defect, leading to rapid lung collapse and severe respiratory distress.
- This condition can quickly progress to a **tension pneumothorax** and compromise both ventilation and circulation, making it immediately life-threatening.
*Flail chest (multiple rib fractures with paradoxical movement)*
- **Flail chest** involves a segment of the thoracic cage that separates independently from the rest of the chest wall, leading to **paradoxical chest wall movement**.
- While serious and often causing significant pain and respiratory compromise, it is generally less acutely life-threatening than an open pneumothorax.
*Diaphragmatic injury (rupture of the diaphragm)*
- A **diaphragmatic injury** can lead to herniation of abdominal contents into the chest cavity, causing respiratory distress and potential organ strangulation.
- While serious and requiring surgical repair, it is often not an immediate threat to life compared to direct impairment of gas exchange seen in an open pneumothorax.
*Single rib fracture (isolated rib injury)*
- A **single rib fracture** is generally the least serious of the options and can cause pain, but typically does not lead to significant respiratory compromise unless associated with other complications.
- Management primarily involves pain control and monitoring for potential secondary injuries like a simple pneumothorax or hemothorax.
Chest Trauma Indian Medical PG Question 3: Emergency management for Tension pneumothorax is:
- A. Tracheostomy
- B. Insertion of a chest tube
- C. Needle decompression (Correct Answer)
- D. Thoracotomy
Chest Trauma Explanation: ***Needle decompression***
- This is the immediate, **life-saving intervention** for tension pneumothorax, as it rapidly relieves the pressure on the heart and lungs.
- It involves inserting a large-bore needle into the **second intercostal space** in the midclavicular line or the fourth/fifth intercostal space in the anterior axillary line to convert the tension pneumothorax into a simple pneumothorax.
*Tracheostomy*
- This procedure creates an opening in the trachea to secure an **airway**, primarily used for upper airway obstruction or long-term ventilation.
- It does not address the underlying pathology of accumulated air in the pleural space, which is causing mediastinal shift and hemodynamic compromise.
*Insertion of a chest tube*
- While essential for definitive management of a pneumothorax, a chest tube requires more time to set up and insert compared to needle decompression.
- In an acute tension pneumothorax, the priority is immediate pressure relief, which needle decompression provides more rapidly.
*Thoracotomy*
- This is a major surgical procedure involving opening the chest wall, typically reserved for **life-threatening conditions within the chest** that require direct surgical intervention, such as severe trauma or uncontrollable bleeding.
- It is not the appropriate initial emergency management for tension pneumothorax, as it is too invasive and time-consuming for immediate pressure relief.
Chest Trauma Indian Medical PG Question 4: A 65-year-old male presents to the emergency department with acute respiratory distress, decreased breath sounds, and stony dullness to percussion on the right side. What is the initial management for this patient?
- A. Echocardiogram
- B. Pericardial window
- C. Pericardiocentesis
- D. Thoracentesis of the right chest cavity (Correct Answer)
Chest Trauma Explanation: ***Thoracentesis of the right chest cavity***
- This patient presents with **acute respiratory distress**, **decreased breath sounds**, and **stony dullness to percussion** on the right side, which are classic signs of a **large pleural effusion**.
- **Thoracentesis** (needle aspiration of pleural fluid) is the immediate intervention to relieve pressure on the lung, allow for re-expansion, and improve breathing.
- This procedure provides both diagnostic information (analyzing pleural fluid) and therapeutic relief.
*Pericardiocentesis*
- This procedure is performed to drain fluid from the **pericardial sac** in cases of **cardiac tamponade** (Beck's triad: hypotension, muffled heart sounds, JVP elevation).
- The patient's symptoms of decreased breath sounds, dullness to percussion, and unilateral findings point to a **pleural** issue, not a cardiac one.
*Echocardiogram*
- An **echocardiogram** is an imaging test used to visualize the heart's structure and function and assess for pericardial effusions.
- While useful for diagnosis, it is **not an initial management step** to relieve acute respiratory distress caused by a pleural effusion.
- In emergency settings with clear clinical signs, **therapeutic intervention takes priority** over diagnostic imaging.
*Pericardial window*
- A **pericardial window** is a surgical procedure to create an opening in the pericardium, typically for recurrent or loculated pericardial effusions.
- This is a **definitive surgical treatment** and not an initial emergency management for acute respiratory distress from pleural pathology.
Chest Trauma Indian Medical PG Question 5: Which of these is the most life-threatening injury that can be identified by assessing the breathing component of the patient?
- A. Blunt cardiac injury
- B. Tension pneumothorax (Correct Answer)
- C. Cervical spine injury
- D. Laryngotracheal injury
Chest Trauma Explanation: ***Tension pneumothorax***
- A tension pneumothorax is a **life-threatening condition** identified during the breathing assessment, as it severely impairs ventilation and causes **hemodynamic instability** by compressing major vessels.
- Key signs include absent breath sounds on the affected side, **tracheal deviation**, and **hypotension** due to mediastinal shift.
*Blunt cardiac injury*
- While serious, blunt cardiac injury is typically identified during the **circulation assessment**, with signs like arrhythmias, hypotension, or cardiac tamponade.
- Its direct impact on breathing is less immediate compared to a tension pneumothorax.
*Cervical spine injury*
- A cervical spine injury can affect breathing if it involves the **phrenic nerve** (C3-C5), leading to respiratory paralysis, but this is assessed during the **disability component** or secondary survey for neurological deficits.
- It does not directly cause an acute, life-threatening compromise of lung function discernible primarily through a breathing assessment like a tension pneumothorax.
*Laryngotracheal injury*
- A laryngotracheal injury primarily affects the **airway component** (A in ABCDE), leading to immediate obstruction or stridor.
- While critical, it is distinct from problems with the lungs' ability to expand or perform gas exchange, which are assessed under breathing.
Chest Trauma Indian Medical PG Question 6: Which is the most important initial step in managing a trauma patient with massive hemothorax?
- A. Thoracotomy
- B. IV fluids
- C. Chest tube (Correct Answer)
- D. Blood transfusion
Chest Trauma Explanation: ***Chest tube***
- A **chest tube** (thoracostomy) is crucial for both diagnosing and treating a massive hemothorax, allowing immediate drainage of blood and assessing the rate of ongoing bleeding.
- Rapid evacuation of blood from the pleural space improves **lung re-expansion**, ventilation, and helps to reduce pressure on the mediastinum.
*Thoracotomy*
- **Thoracotomy** is indicated if there is persistent significant bleeding (e.g., >1500 mL initially or >200 mL/hr for 2-4 hours), but the initial step is always chest tube insertion.
- Performing a thoracotomy as the *first* step is generally reserved for situations with profound hemodynamic instability or suspicion of major vascular injury not amenable to less invasive measures.
*IV fluids*
- While **IV fluids** are essential for maintaining hemodynamic stability in a trauma patient with massive blood loss, they do not address the source of bleeding or relieve the compression caused by the hemothorax.
- Administering fluids without evacuating the blood from the chest can transiently improve vital signs but does not resolve the underlying problem or prevent further complications.
*Blood transfusion*
- **Blood transfusion** is vital for correcting hypovolemic shock and improving oxygen-carrying capacity in patients with massive hemorrhage.
- However, it is a supportive measure and does not evacuate the blood from the pleural space or stop the bleeding, which is the primary goal of the initial management of a massive hemothorax.
Chest Trauma Indian Medical PG Question 7: A young man had a stab injury in left 5th ICS at the mid clavicular line. On examination there is no deviation of trachea, heart sounds diminished, systolic BP is 80 mmHg, and RR is 20/min. The diagnosis is
- A. Cardiac tamponade (Correct Answer)
- B. Tension pneumothorax
- C. Flail chest
- D. Massive left hemothorax
Chest Trauma Explanation: ***Cardiac tamponade***
- A stab injury in the 5th intercostal space at the mid-clavicular line puts the **heart at risk**, leading to pericardial effusion and **diminished heart sounds**.
- **Hypotension (80 mmHg systolic BP)** and **diminished heart sounds** are key components of **Beck's triad**, indicative of cardiac tamponade.
*Tension pneumothorax*
- This condition involves air accumulation in the pleural space, leading to **tracheal deviation away from the affected side** and absent breath sounds, neither of which is mentioned.
- While it causes hypotension, the combination with **diminished heart sounds** and no tracheal deviation points away from tension pneumothorax.
*Flail chest*
- Characterized by **paradoxical chest wall movement** due to multiple rib fractures, which is not described.
- Would primarily cause respiratory distress and pain, but not typically **diminished heart sounds** or acute hypotension without other injuries.
*Massive left hemothorax*
- Would present with **absent breath sounds** on the affected side and signs of **hypovolemic shock**, which are not specified beyond hypotension.
- The presence of **diminished heart sounds** strongly suggests a pericardial issue rather than solely blood in the pleural space.
Chest Trauma Indian Medical PG Question 8: Blunt trauma to right side of chest, hyperresonance on right side on percussion, dyspnea, tachypnea. Heart rate-100, BP-120/80, best initial diagnostic step is
- A. Needle decompression
- B. Chest X-ray (Correct Answer)
- C. O2 inhalation
- D. IV fluids
Chest Trauma Explanation: ***Chest Xray***
- The symptoms (blunt chest trauma, dyspnea, tachypnea, hyperresonance on percussion) are highly suggestive of a **pneumothorax**.
- A **Chest X-ray** is the **best initial diagnostic step** to confirm the diagnosis, determine its size, and rule out other life-threatening conditions like hemothorax or tension pneumothorax.
*Needle decompression*
- This is a **therapeutic intervention** for a **tension pneumothorax**, not a diagnostic step.
- While the symptoms are concerning, without confirmation of a tension pneumothorax (e.g., severe hypotension, tracheal deviation, absent breath sounds), empirical needle decompression is not the first step.
*O2 inhalation*
- **Oxygen administration** is a supportive measure for dyspnea and hypoxemia but does not diagnose the underlying cause of the respiratory distress.
- While often given immediately, it's not the primary diagnostic step to understand the chest injury.
*IV fluids*
- **Intravenous fluids** are used to manage hypovolemia or shock, which is not indicated by the patient's current stable blood pressure (120/80 mmHg).
- There is no clinical evidence of significant blood loss or dehydration from the provided information to warrant IV fluids as the best initial step.
Chest Trauma Indian Medical PG Question 9: A person had an accident and came to casualty with contusion on left precordium. There was decrease in breath sounds on left side, trachea deviated to right side and normal heart sounds. Which of the following is the first line of management?
- A. Needle thoracocentesis (Correct Answer)
- B. Chest tube thoracostomy
- C. Pericardiocentesis
- D. Open surgery
Chest Trauma Explanation: ***Needle thoracocentesis***
- The constellation of **decreased breath sounds** on the left, **tracheal deviation** to the right, and a history of trauma indicates a **tension pneumothorax**.
- **Needle decompression** (thoracocentesis) is the immediate, life-saving intervention for tension pneumothorax to relieve pressure and restore cardiorespiratory function.
*Chest tube thoracostomy*
- While a **chest tube** (tube thoracostomy) is the definitive treatment for pneumothorax, it is not the *first-line* **emergency management** for a **tension pneumothorax** where immediate decompression is critical.
- The delay in setting up and inserting a chest tube can be fatal in a **tension pneumothorax**.
*Pericardiocentesis*
- **Pericardiocentesis** is indicated for **cardiac tamponade**, which would typically present with muffled heart sounds, hypotension, and distended neck veins, none of which are noted here.
- The presence of **tracheal deviation** and **decreased breath sounds** specifically points away from isolated cardiac tamponade.
*Open surgery*
- **Open surgery (thoracotomy)** is a major surgical procedure reserved for cases like massive hemorrhage or major airway injury, and not the initial rapid management for a tension pneumothorax.
- Performing open surgery directly for a tension pneumothorax would be too slow and inappropriate as an initial intervention.
Chest Trauma Indian Medical PG Question 10: True about chest trauma:
- A. All of the options
- B. ECG done in all cases associated with sternal fracture (Correct Answer)
- C. Urgent surgery needed in all cases
- D. Under water seal drainage if associated with pneumothorax. X-ray chest investigation of choice
Chest Trauma Explanation: ***ECG done in all cases associated with sternal fracture***
- A **sternal fracture** is a significant injury often caused by high-impact trauma, which can lead to **myocardial contusion** or other cardiac injuries.
- An **ECG** is **mandatory** in all cases of sternal fracture for detecting potential cardiac involvement, such as **arrhythmias** or **ischemic changes**, indicating underlying myocardial damage.
- This is a clear, unequivocal true statement about chest trauma management and the **best answer**.
*All of the options*
- This option is incorrect because not all statements provided are true or represent best practices in chest trauma management.
- Specifically, "urgent surgery needed in all cases" is clearly false, making this option incorrect.
*Urgent surgery needed in all cases*
- This statement is **false**. Approximately **80-85% of chest trauma** cases are managed **non-operatively** with supportive care.
- Urgent surgery is required only in specific situations: **massive hemothorax**, **cardiac tamponade**, **major airway injury**, **esophageal perforation**, or ongoing bleeding.
- Simple rib fractures, minor pneumothorax, and pulmonary contusions rarely require surgery.
*Under water seal drainage if associated with pneumothorax. X-ray chest investigation of choice*
- While both components of this statement are individually true, the option combines two separate management concepts without clear connection.
- **Underwater seal drainage (chest tube)** is indeed appropriate for significant pneumothorax, and **chest X-ray** is the initial investigation of choice for chest trauma.
- However, this option is less precise than Option B, which states an absolute management protocol, making Option B the superior choice.
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