Chest Trauma

On this page

Chest Trauma: Initial Rx - Life Savers First

  • Primary Survey (ABCDE): Address life threats.
    • Airway & C-Spine: Ensure patency, protect spine.
    • Breathing: Address lethal six! (📌 ATOM-FC: Airway obstruction, Tension pneumo, Open pneumo, Massive hemo, Flail chest, Cardiac tamponade)
      • Tension Pneumothorax: Needle decompress (2nd ICS MCL / 5th ICS AAL) → chest tube.
      • Open Pneumothorax: Three-sided occlusive dressing.
      • Massive Hemothorax: Chest tube. >1500mL initial / >200mL/hr (2-4h) → Thoracotomy.
      • Flail Chest: Paradoxical motion. Analgesia, O2; PPV if resp. failure.
      • Cardiac Tamponade: Beck's triad (↓BP, ↑JVP, muffled sounds). Pericardiocentesis.
    • Circulation: 2 large IVs, fluids; control hemorrhage.
    • Disability: GCS, pupils.
    • Exposure & Environment: Prevent hypothermia.

⭐ In tension pneumothorax, immediate needle decompression is life-saving before chest X-ray. Preferred site: 5th ICS AAL.

Lethal Six Chest Injuries

Pleural Space Invaders - Air & Blood Battles

Pneumothorax (Air)

  • Types: Simple; Tension (mediastinal shift, ↓CO ⚠️); Open (sucking wound).
  • Dx: ↓BS, hyperresonant. CXR: pleural line, no lung marks. Tension: mediastinal shift. eFAST: no lung slide.
  • Rx:
    • Tension: Needle decompress (14G, 2nd ICS MCL / 5th ICS MAL) → ICD.
    • Open: 3-sided dressing → ICD.
    • Other: ICD (5th ICS, Triangle of Safety). Small: observe.

Hemothorax (Blood)

  • Dx: ↓BS, dull. CXR: blunted CPA (>200mL), opacity.
  • Rx:
    • ICD (28-32F) drainage.
    • Thoracotomy indications:

      ⭐ Initial drain >1500mL; OR >200mL/hr x 2-4hr; OR persistent shock.

    • Retained clot (>300-500mL): VATS/Thoracotomy.

Chest X-ray: Tension Pneumothorax and Hemothorax

Chest Wall & Cardiac Hits - Beat & Breathe Blues

  • Rib Fractures: Common. Pain → splinting → atelectasis/pneumonia.
    • Ribs 1-2: Suspect major vascular/bronchial injury.
    • Ribs 9-11: Suspect diaphragmatic/hepatic/splenic injury.
  • Flail Chest: ≥3 consecutive ribs fractured in ≥2 places. Paradoxical motion. Underlying pulmonary contusion is key.
    • Rx: Pain control, O2, PPV if respiratory failure.
  • Sternal Fracture: High energy. Screen for myocardial contusion, aortic injury.
  • Pulmonary Contusion: Lung bruising. Hypoxia. CXR: infiltrates. Worsens 24-48 hrs.
    • Rx: Supportive, O2, PEEP.
  • Myocardial Contusion (BCI): ECG (arrhythmias, ST changes), ↑Troponin. Echo.
    • Rx: Monitor, supportive.
  • Cardiac Tamponade: Beck's Triad (📌 3 D's: Decreased BP, Distant heart sounds, Distended neck veins). Pulsus paradoxus >10 mmHg.
    • Dx: FAST/Echo. Rx: Pericardiocentesis.

    ⭐ Electrical alternans on ECG is specific for large pericardial effusion/tamponade.

  • Commotio Cordis: Sudden V-fib from chest blow. Structurally normal heart. Rx: Defibrillation.

Flail chest breathing mechanics diagram

Deep Thoracic Threats - Great Vessel & Pipe Perils

  • Traumatic Aortic Rupture (TAR)
    • Mechanism: Deceleration (MVA, fall).
    • Site: Aortic isthmus (most common).
    • CXR: Widened mediastinum (>8 cm), left hemothorax.
    • Dx: CTA gold standard. TEE if unstable.
    • Rx: BP control (SBP 100-120 mmHg), TEVAR/open surgery.
    • ⭐ > Most common site of traumatic aortic rupture is the aortic isthmus.
  • Other Great Vessel Injuries (SVC, IVC, Pulmonary vessels)
    • High mortality; often penetrating.
    • Dx: CTA. Rx: Surgical repair.
  • Tracheobronchial Injury (TBI)
    • Site: Usually within 2.5 cm of carina.
    • Signs: Subcutaneous emphysema, persistent air leak, Hamman's sign, hemoptysis.
    • Dx: Bronchoscopy (gold standard).
    • Rx: Secure airway, surgical repair.
  • Esophageal Perforation
    • Causes: Penetrating, Boerhaave's, iatrogenic.
    • Signs: Severe chest pain, Mackler's triad (Boerhaave's). Left pleural effusion common.
    • Dx: Contrast esophagogram (Gastrografin then barium), CT.
    • Rx: NPO, IV antibiotics, surgical repair. Cross-section of thorax: anatomy diagram and CT scan

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Tension pneumothorax: immediate needle decompression, then chest tube.
  • Massive hemothorax: >1500 mL or >200 mL/hr drainage; requires thoracotomy.
  • Flail chest: ≥3 ribs fractured in ≥2 places; paradoxical breathing.
  • Cardiac tamponade (Beck's triad): hypotension, JVD, muffled heart sounds; needs pericardiocentesis.
  • Aortic rupture: common at ligamentum arteriosum; widened mediastinum on CXR.
  • Open pneumothorax: sucking chest wound; manage with three-sided occlusive dressing.
  • Tracheobronchial injury: suspect with persistent pneumothorax, subcutaneous emphysema, hemoptysis.
Rezzy AI Tutor

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, our AI tutor, to explain anything you didn't understand

Practice Questions: Chest Trauma

Test your understanding with these related questions

Thoracotomy is indicated in all the following conditions except:

1 of 5

Flashcards: Chest Trauma

1/10

extended FAST incorporates _____ and right thoracic views to assess for pneumothorax and haemothorax.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

extended FAST incorporates _____ and right thoracic views to assess for pneumothorax and haemothorax.

Left

browseSpaceflip

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

Start For Free
Chest Trauma - Free Indian Medical PG Review