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Thoracic Trauma J William Finley, MD Trauma Director Providence Regional Medical Center

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Thoracic Trauma. J William Finley, MD Trauma Director Providence Regional Medical Center. Thoracic Trauma. Fourth Leading cause of death 150,000 Annual deaths Second only to head injury in cause of death 25% of trauma related deaths Often associated with other injuries Prevention Focus - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Thoracic Trauma

Thoracic Trauma

J William Finley, MD

Trauma Director

Providence Regional Medical Center

Page 2: Thoracic Trauma

Thoracic Trauma

• Fourth Leading cause of death– 150,000 Annual deaths

• Second only to head injury in cause of death– 25% of trauma related deaths

• Often associated with other injuries• Prevention Focus

– Gun Control Legislation– Improved motor vehicle restraint systems

• Passive Restraint Systems• Airbags

Page 3: Thoracic Trauma

Anatomy

• Thoracic cavity– Thoracic inlet – Diaphragm

• Contains a lot of important stuff– Heart– Lungs– Mediastinal structures

Page 4: Thoracic Trauma

Extensive Armor

Page 5: Thoracic Trauma

There is no perfect protection…

Page 6: Thoracic Trauma

It’s a Dangerous World

• Penetrating Injury– Low Energy

• Stab wounds

– High Energy• GSW

• Blunt Injury– Crush– Compression– Shear– Acceleration/Deceleration

Page 7: Thoracic Trauma

Spectrum of Disease

• Chest Wall– Contusions– Rib fractures– Flail Chest

• Pulmonary– Pulmonary contusion– Pulmonary laceration– Hemothorax– Pneumothorax

Page 8: Thoracic Trauma

Spectrum of Disease

• Cardiac– Contusion– Laceration– Avulsion– Tamponade

• Mediastinal– Great vessel – Tracheobronchial – Esophageal– Aortic

Page 9: Thoracic Trauma

Keys To Diagnosis

• Index of suspicion

• Injury association

• Clinical signs/symptoms

• Diagnostic imaging– Xray– CT– Ultrasound

Page 10: Thoracic Trauma

Basic Trauma Resuscitation

• Easy as A-B-C– A - Airway– B - Breathing – C - Circulation

Page 11: Thoracic Trauma

October 24, 2011

Thanks to Jonathan Holbrook, Tall Taurus Media, LLCReal Heroes Breakfast 2011

Snohomish County, American Red Cross

Page 12: Thoracic Trauma

Hemothorax

• Accumulation of blood in the pleural space• Serious hemorrhage may accumulate 1,500

mL of blood– Mortality rate of 75%– Each side of thorax may hold up to 3,000 mL

• Blood loss in thorax causes a decrease in tidal volume– Ventilation/Perfusion Mismatch & Shock

• Typically accompanies pneumothorax– Hemopneumothorax

Page 13: Thoracic Trauma

Hemothorax

• Blunt or penetrating chest trauma

• Diagnosis– Small to moderate

• Only seen on CXR or CT

– Large• May be diagnosed clinically

– Dull to percussion over injured side– Decreased BS on affected side– Decreased chest expansion

Page 14: Thoracic Trauma

Hemothorax

Page 15: Thoracic Trauma

Hemothorax

• Management– Placement of tube thoracostomy

• 36 French tube or greater

– Operative indications, thoracotomy• Initial 1-1.5 L blood• Ongoing 200-250/hr losses

Page 16: Thoracic Trauma

ED Thoracotomy

• Most surgeons hold a very pessimistic view

• Success rates vary• Overall success rate 4-

5%• The first successful

'prehospital' thoracotomy and cardiac repair was carried out by Hill on a kitchen table in Montgomery, Alabama in 1902.

Page 17: Thoracic Trauma

Why?

• Abysmal Success rate

• Exposes medical personnel to risk

• There are survivors

• The main determinants for survivability– mechanism of injury – location of injury– presence or absence of vital signs

Page 18: Thoracic Trauma

Mechanism of Injury

• Penetrating thoracic injury– Survival rate 18-33%

• stab wounds > gunshot wounds.• Isolated thoracic stab wounds causing cardiac

tamponade approach 70% survival• Gun shot wounds injuring more than one cardiac

chamber and causing exsanguination have a much higher mortality.

• Blunt trauma survival rates – Vary between 0 and 2.5%

Page 19: Thoracic Trauma

Location of Injury

• Almost all survivors of emergency thoracotomy suffer isolated injuries to the thoracic cavity.

• Cardiac injuries have the highest survival– single chamber > multiple chamber– great vessels and pulmonary hila carry a

much higher mortality

Page 20: Thoracic Trauma

Presence of Vital Signs

• Survival related to – Presence of cardiac activity– Amount of time since loss of cardiac activity

• 0% for those patients arresting at scene, • 4% when arrest occurred in the ambulance, • 19% for emergency department arrest and • 27% for those who deteriorated but did not arrest

in the emergency department1

1Tyburski JG, J Trauma 2000.

Page 21: Thoracic Trauma

Presence of Vital Signs

• Survival for blunt trauma patients who never exhibited any signs of life is almost uniformly zero.

• Survival for penetrating trauma patients without signs of life is between 0 and 5%.

Page 22: Thoracic Trauma

ED Thoractomy - Why?

• Release pericardial tamponade

• Enable open cardiac massage

• Occlude the descending aorta

• Control intrathoracic hemorrhage

Page 23: Thoracic Trauma

ED Thoracotomy - How

• Steps– Prep chest, generally left chest– Generous incision from sternal border to mid

axillary line– Down to intercostal muscles– Divide chest along upper margin of 6th rib– Spread ribs– Retract lung– Identify and incise the pericardium to release

potential tamponade

Page 24: Thoracic Trauma

ED Thoracotomy - How

• Steps– Recognize and repair any cardiac injury– Open cardiac massage using 2 hand

technique– Cross clamp aorta– Incision can be extended to right side of chest

(Clamshell)– Ongoing resuscitation– Closure in OR

Page 25: Thoracic Trauma

Posterio-Lateral Thoractomy

Page 26: Thoracic Trauma

Clamshell Thoracotomy

Page 27: Thoracic Trauma

Thoracic Trauma

• Can create dramatic injuries

• Keep to resuscitation basics A-B-C

• Involve surgeons early

• ED thoracotomy does have some survivors