A twenty-five year old male presents on your emergency room rotation after sustaining a single gunshot wound (GSW) to the right side of his chest. Paramedics found the patient awake and combative with a palpable pulse, systolic BP of 100 mm Hg, and respiratory rate 30/ minute. An occlusive dressing was taped over the entry site in the fifth intercostal space, midaxillary line. On arrival, the patient's vital signs were worse. You note that the patient's trachea is deviated to the left, his jugular veins are distended, he has no breathing sounds on the right side of his chest, he has palpable crepitus, and on percussion he has hyper-resonance on the right side of the chest.
The resident on call determines that the patient has a tension pneumothorax and inserts a 14 gauge needle in the right midclavicular line at the second intercostal space - air is heard escaping. A chest tube is inserted at the fifth intercostal space in the midaxillary line and connected to a chest drainage device. The patient was stabilized and transferred to the Trauma Intensive Care Unit (TICU).
Questions to consider:
- What might have created the tension pneumothorax?
The nature of some injuries to the chest wall may create an opening that acts like a one-way valve. Trauma may create an inward swinging flap in the chest wall. Air is sucked into the pleural cavity during inspiration, but during expiration the chest wall closes on itself, preventing air from escaping.
- Why did the resident insert the chest tube into the fifth intercostal space?
Insertion of the chest tube at the fifth intercostal space allows the release and escape of air from the pleural space into the chest drainage device. In addition, it allows the physician to intervene immediately to remedy a potentially life threatening event while preventing further damage to a potentially injured diaphragm.
- What structures did the chest tube pass through to enter the pleural cavity?
Skin, fat, external intercostal muscle, internal intercostal muscle, innermost intercostal muscle, endothoracic fascia, and parietal pleura.
- What is tension pneumothorax?
It is the presence of air in the pleural space under pressure
. The lung collapses, and a mediastinal shift interferes with the expansion of the contralateral lung and compromises venous return to the heart via the IVC. This condition is extremely dangerous and requires urgent action. Other possible injuries leading to tension pneumothorax are demonstrated
.
- What are the signs and symptoms of tension pneumothorax?
Tachypnea, contralateral tracheal deviation, hyperresonance, distended neck veins, dyspnea, and hypotension.
- What is the appropriate treatment?
Needle thoracocentesis in the second intercostal space in the midclavicular line, followed by chest tube placement.
References:
Moore's Clinical Anatomy pp. 48-60.
Advanced Surgical Recall pp 326 - 339.