4954thoracic Trauma
4954thoracic Trauma
4954thoracic Trauma
Prepared by
Miss Fatima Hirzallah
INTRODUCTION
Thoracic injuries are directly
INTRODUCTION
The majority (approximately 90%) of
all patients who sustain thoracic
trauma can be managed
conservatively, with no more than a
chest drain, monitoring and
analgesia.
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
OF CHEST TRAUMA
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
OF CHEST TRAUMA
The commonest manifestation of thoracic
trauma is hypoxia, the causes of which
include:
haemorrhage
lung collapse and compression
ventilatory or cardiac failure
pulmonary contusion
changes in intrathoracic pressure; and
mediastinal displacement.
ASSESSMENT
The sequence of questions in the
CHEST INJURIES
Immediately life-threatening injuries
TENSION
PNEUMOTHORAX
A tension pneumothorax develops
Treatment
The treatment of tension
OPEN PNEUMOTHORAX
When a penetrating chest wall injury
Treatment
The defect should be covered with a
MASSIVE HAEMOTHORAX
Massive haemothorax is usually
Treatment
Infusion of fluids through large-
FLAIL CHEST
Severe direct chest wall injury may cause
Treatment
If respiratory compromise is present,
this may be initially managed by
stabilization of the chest wall.
Pain managment
Treatment
The ideal management of cardiac
tamponade is surgical
decompression and exploration.
Pericardiocentesis
Potentially life-threatening
injuries
potentially life-threatening thoracic injuries:
Cardiac contusion
Aortic disruption
Diaphragmatic rupture
Major airway injury
Oesophageal injury
Pulmonary contusion
Simple pneumothorax
Haemothorax.
PULMONARY CONTUSION
All patients with significant chest wall trauma
Treatment
Treatment involves high-flow oxygen
therapy
serial blood gas analysis
appropriate analgesia
fluid replacement and physiotherapy
In some patients a period of
mechanical ventilation is required.
DIAPHRAGMATIC
RUPTURE
Penetrating injuries cause small
Treatment
Unless intracranial injuries or potentially
fatal haemorrhage require immediate
surgery ,repair of the diaphragm should
not be delayed.
This is often performed through a
laparotomy for associated abdominal
injuries, but may equally be performed
through a thoracotomy or thoracoscopy.
TRAUMATIC AORTIC
DISRUPTION
Tears of the aorta are immediately fatal
in approximately 90% of cases. They
occur as a result of blunt or
deceleration injuries, typically in a road
traffic accident or fall from a height.
The aorta may be completely or
partially transected, or may have a
spiral tear.
Treatment
The survival of patients after reaching
THANKS