Chest Trauma

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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.

Practice Questions: Chest Trauma

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Thoracotomy is indicated in all the following conditions except:

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Flashcards: Chest Trauma

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

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

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