Chest Trauma
Chest Trauma
Penetrating Injury
Both
Thoracic Trauma
Anatomical Injuries
Thoracic Cage (Skeletal)
Cardiovascular
Pleural and Pulmonary
Mediastinal
Diaphragmatic
Esophageal
Penetrating Cardiac
Classification according to clinical
evolution, prognosis and grade of
treatment emergency:
[J.Holliman, 2010]
Hypercarbia
∆ in intrathoracic pressure relationships
↓ level of consciousness
Acidosis
hypoperfusion of tissues (metabolic)
Thoracic Trauma
Ventilation & Respiration Review
How & Why does ventilation
(inspiration & expiration) occur?
What actually happens in ventilation?
What stimulates its occurrence?
vascular disruption
Thoracic Trauma
General Pathophysiology
Impairments in ventilatory efficiency
chest excursion compromise
– pain
– air in pleural space
– asymmetrical movement
bleeding in pleural space
ineffective diaphragm contraction
Thoracic Trauma
General Pathophysiology
Impairments in gas exchange
atelectasis
pulmonary contusion
Tension pneumothorax
Massive hemothorax
Cardiac tamponade
Conditions
Apnea
Respiratory Distress
Thoracic Trauma
Assessment Findings
Mental Status (decreased)
Pulse (absent, tachy or brady)
BP (narrow PP, hyper- or hypotension,
pulsus paradoxus)
Ventilatory rate & effort (tachy- or
bradypnea, labored, retractions)
Skin (diaphoresis, pallor, cyanosis, open
injury, ecchymosis)
Thoracic Trauma
Assessment Findings
Neck (tracheal position, SQ emphysema,
JVD, open injury)
Chest (contusions, tenderness, asymmetry,
absent or decreased lung sounds, bowel
sounds, abnormal percussion, open injury,
impaled object, crepitus, hemoptysis)
Heart Sounds (muffled, distant, regurgitant
murmur)
Upper abdomen (contusion, open injury)
Thoracic Trauma
Assessment Findings
ECG (ST segment abnormalities,
dysrhythmias)
History
Dyspnea
Pain
Past hx of cardiorespiratory disease
Restraint devices used
Item/Weapon involved in injury
Thoracic Trauma
SPECIFIC INJURIES
Rib Fracture
Most common chest wall injury from
direct trauma
More common in adults than children
Especially common in elderly
Ribs form rings
Possibility of break in two places
Most commonly 5th - 9th ribs
Poor protection
Rib Fracture
Fractures of 1st and 2nd second require
high force
Frequently have injury to aorta or bronchi
Occur in 90% of patients with tracheo-
bronchial rupture
May injure subclavian artery/vein
May result in pneumothorax
30% will die
Rib Fracture
Fractures of 10 to 12th ribs can cause
damage to underlying abdominal solid
organs:
Liver
Spleen
Kidneys
Rib Fracture
Assessment Findings
Localized pain, tenderness
Increases on palpation or when patient:
Coughs
Moves
Breathes deeply
“Splinted” Respirations
Instability in chest wall, Crepitus
Deformity and discoloration
Associated pneumo or hemothorax
Rib Fracture
Management
High concentration O2
Positive pressure ventilation as needed
Encourage pt to breath deeply
Helps prevent atelectasis
Analgesics for isolated trauma
Rib Fracture
Management
Monitor elderly and COPD patients closely
Broken ribs can cause decompensation
Patients will fail to breathe deeply and cough,
resulting in poor clearance of secretions
Usually Non-Emergent Transport
Sternal Fracture
Uncommon, 5-8% in blunt chest trauma
Large traumatic force
Direct blow to front of chest by
Deceleration
steering wheel
dashboard
Other object
Sternal Fracture
25 - 45% mortality due to associated trauma:
Disruption of thoracic aorta
Diaphragm rupture
Flail chest
Myocardial trauma
assault
birth trauma
Decreased ventilation
Hypercapnea
Hypoxia
Flail Chest
Assessment Findings
Chest wall contusion
Respiratory distress
Pleuritic chest pain
Splinting of affected side
Crepitus
Tachypnea, Tachycardia
Paradoxical movement (possible)
Flail Chest
Management
Suspect spinal injuries
Establish airway
High concentration oxygen
Assist ventilation with BVM
Treat hypoxia from underlying contusion
Promote full lung expansion
Monitor EKG
Chest trauma can cause dysrhythmias
Emergent Transport
Trauma center
Simple Pneumothorax
Incidence
10-30% in blunt chest trauma
almost 100% with penetrating chest trauma
Morbidity & Mortality dependent on
extent of atelectasis
associated injuries
Simple Pneumothorax
Causes
Commonly a fx rib lacerates lung
Paper bag effect
May occur spontaneously in tall, thin young
males following:
Exertion
Coughing
Air Travel
IV of LR/NS
Monitor for progression
Monitor ECG
Usually Non-emergent transport
Open Pneumothorax
Exhale
Open Pneumothorax
hypoxia
Heart is being
compressed
Tension Pneumothorax
Assessment Findings - Most Likely
Severe dyspnea ⇒ extreme resp distress
Restlessness, anxiety, agitation
Decreased/absent breath sounds
Worsening or Severe Shock / Cardiovascular
collapse
Tachycardia
Weak pulse
Hypotension
RBBB
PVCs
PACs
Myocardial Contusion
Management
Establish airway
High concentration O2
IV LR/NS
Cautious fluid administration due to injured myocardium
ECG
Standard drug therapy for arrhythmias
12 Lead ECG if time permits
Consider vasopressors for hypotension
Emergent Transport
Trauma Center
Pericardial Tamponade
Incidence
Usually associated with penetrating
trauma
Rare in blunt trauma
Occurs in < 2% of chest trauma
GSW wounds have higher mortality
than stab wounds
Lower mortality rate if isolated
tamponade
Pericardial Tamponade
Pathophysiology
Space normally filled with 30-50 ml of straw-
colored fluid
lubrication
lymphatic discharge
Neck
Shoulders
Obvious SQ emphysema
Hemoptysis
Especially of bright red blood
Signs of tension pneumothorax unresponsive
to needle decompression
Tracheobronchial Rupture
Management
Establish airway and ventilations
Consider early intubation
intubating right or left mainstem may be life saving
Emergent Transport
Trauma Center
INDICATIONS FOR EMERGENCY
TORACOTOMY IN TRAUMA
mediastinal shift