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Pleural Effusion3

Pleural effusion is an abnormal collection of fluid in the pleural space that can be caused by conditions like heart failure, pneumonia, cancer, or pulmonary embolism. It is diagnosed based on symptoms, physical exam findings, chest imaging, and pleural fluid analysis. Management depends on the cause and may involve antibiotics, thoracentesis, chest tube placement, fibrinolytics, thoracoscopy, or decortication to drain the fluid and treat any underlying infection.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
147 views69 pages

Pleural Effusion3

Pleural effusion is an abnormal collection of fluid in the pleural space that can be caused by conditions like heart failure, pneumonia, cancer, or pulmonary embolism. It is diagnosed based on symptoms, physical exam findings, chest imaging, and pleural fluid analysis. Management depends on the cause and may involve antibiotics, thoracentesis, chest tube placement, fibrinolytics, thoracoscopy, or decortication to drain the fluid and treat any underlying infection.

Uploaded by

getnus
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Pleural effusion

Pleural effusion
Definition
• An abnormal collection of fluid in the pleural
space resulting from excess fluid production
or decreased absorption
• Hydrostatic and oncotic pressure
• Lymphatic drainage
Pleural effusion
Fluid
• Plasma - Effusion
• Pus - Empyema
• Blood - Hemothorax
• Lymph - Chylothorax
• Cholesterol - Pseudochylothorax
• Urine - Urinothorax
Pleural effusion
Pleural effusion
Epidermiology
• United States
– 1 million cases annually
• Internationally
– 320/100,000 in industrialized countries
Cause ?
Pleural effusion
Pathophysiology
• Altered permeability of the pleural
membranes ( Inflamation, CA, PE)
• intravascular oncotic pressure
• Increased capillary permeability or vascular
disruption
• Increased capillary hydrostatic pressure
Pleural effusion
Pathophysiology
• Reduction of pressure in the pleural space
• Decreased lymphatic drainage/thoracic duct
rupture
• Increased peritoneal fluid, with migration
across the diaphragm via the lymphatics or
structural defect
Pleural effusion
Most common causes
• Heart failure
• Malignancy
• Pneumonia
• TB
• Pulmonary embolism
History
• Dyspnea
• Pleuritic chest pain
• Cough
• Trauma
• History of cancer
• Cardiac surgery
• Ocupational
• Drugs
Physical examination
• Palpation
– Trachea shift
– Decrease chest wall movement
– Decrease tactile fremitus
• Percussion
– Dullness on percussion
Pleural effusion
• Auscultation
– Decrease breath sounds
– Decrease vocal resonance
– Egophony positive
• Other findings:
– ascites,JVD, peripheral edema, friction rub
EMPYEMA THORACIS
Definition
• Empyema
– Pus in pleural space
– Pleural effusion with thick , purulent
appearing ( Richard W. Light )
Pathophysiologic features
• Evolution of a parapneumonic pleural effusion
can be divided in three stages
– Exudative stage(Uncomplicated)
– Fibrinopurulent stage(Complicated)
– Organizing stage(Thoracic empyema)
Exudative stage
• Rapid outpouring of sterile pleural fluid into
pleural space
• Origin of this fluid is not definitely known
• Low WBC and LDH / Normal glucose and pH
• Appropriated antibiotic in this stage , the
pleural effusion progressed no further and
the insertion of chest tube is not necessary
Fibrinopurulent stage
• Accumulation large amount of pleural fluid
with Many PMN , bacteria , cellular debris
• Fibrin is deposited in a continuous sheet
covering both parietal and visceral pleura
• Tendency to loculation and the formation of
limiting membrane
• Lower pH and glucose / Higher LDH
Organization stage
• Fibroblast grow into exudate and produce
inelastic membrane called pleural peel made
exudate become thick
• If remain untreated , the fluid may drain
spontaneously through the chest wall or into
the lung
• Neovascular + fibrosis
• Fibrothorax
Event or state precipitating empyema
Event or state Percentage
 Pulmonary infection 55
 Following a surgical 21
procedure
 Following trauma 6
 Esophageal perforate 5
 Spontaneous pneumothorax 2
 Following thoracentesis
 Subdiaphragmatic infection 2
 Septicemia 1
 Misc. or unknown
1
7
Bacteriologic features
• Aerobic organism > Anaerobic organism
• Aerobic organism
– Gram positive > Gram negative
– Gram positive -- S.aureus , S.pneumoniae are two
most common
– Gram negative – E.coli is the most common but
rarely one pathogen follow by Klebsiella sp ,
Pseudomonas sp , H.influenzae ( single organism )
Bacteriologic features
• Anaerobic bacteria
 Two most common organism are
Bacteriodes sp , Peptostreptococcus sp
Clinical manifestration
• exhibited symptoms of pneumonia
– fever, cough, fatigue, shortness of breath, and
chest pain
• prefer to lie on the side of the body affected
by the empyema
• In chronic process : anorexia, weight loss ,
chronic fever
Physical examination
• Decreased chest movement
• Dullness on percussion
• Decreased breath sound
Diagnosis
• History and physical examination
• Diagnostic imaging
• Pleural effusion studies
Diagnostic imaging
• Chest X-ray
– PA upright and Lat. View
– Blunt costrophernic angle
– If pleural fluid < 100 ml may undetected
– Should be obtained Lateral decubitus view with
suspected side down (50 ml)
– Presence of pleural fluid between chest wall and
inferior part of lung
Lt. lateral
decubitus
Diagnostic imaging
• Ultrasonography
– Rapid , portable , less expensive than CT
– Frequent used after chest X-ray
– confirms the size and location of the pocket of pus
– Can localized small amount of fluid and
loculation ; identify and quantify pleural peel ;
defined solid lesion
– US guide thoracentesis , tube thoracostomy
Diagnostic imaging
• CT scan with intravenous contrast
• The contrast enhances the pleural surface
– pleural fluid loculi
– Thickened parietal pleura is suggestive of empyema
– Small air bubbles within the fluid collection are
called "pleural microbubbles"
• Differentiating empyema , lung abscess , transudative
pleural fluid , subdiapragmatic fluid without CT scan is
often difficult
CT scan showing a loculated
parapneumonic effusion (arrows)
Diagnostic
• Parapneumonic effusion should be sampled if
it meets any of the following criteria
– It is free-flowing but layers >10 mm on a
lateral decubitus film.
– It is loculated
– It is associated with thickened parietal
pleura on a contrast enhanced CT scan, a
finding that is suggestive of empyema
Bad prognostic factors for parapneumonic
effusion and empyema

• Pus present in pleural space


• Gram stain of pleural fluid positive
• Pleural fluid glucose below 40 mg%
• Pleural fluid culture positive
• Pleural fluid pH < 7.0
• Pleural fluid LDH > 3 x upper normal limit for
serum
• Pleural fluid loculated
Management
• Medical management
– IV antibiotic ; CAP / HAP / HCAP
– There are no useful studies of duration of
therapy for bacterial pleural space infection
– Current standard practice : continue
antibiotics for several weeks
Management
• Surgical intervention : 2 Goals
1. drainage of the infected fluid
2. closing up of the space left in the pleural
cavity
Management
• Therapeutic thoracentesis
– Small to moderate , not loculated
• Tube thoracotomy
– A number of methods are available for complete pleural
space drainage
– Multiple tubes used for the multiloculated pleural space
– Must post-drainage imaging to confirm appropriate
catheter placement and complete pleural fluid drainage
– Drain until the drainage rate has fallen below 50 mL/day
and the empyema cavity has closed.
Management
• Intrapleural fibrinolysis
– For loculated parapneumonic effusions and
empyema
– Streptokinase, urokinase, or tissue
plasminogen activator (TPA)
– Fibrinolytics does not cause systemic
thrombolysis or excessive bleeding
complications
Management
• Thoracoscopy with lysis of adhesion
– Next therapeutic maneuver after attempted
frinolysis
– Loculi in pleural space can be disrupted
– Can completely drain infected fluid ,
debride visceral and parietal pleura
– Thoracoscopy is an alternative therapy for
multiloculated empyema
Management
• Thoracoscopy with lysis of adhesion
– Pleural surface can be inspected for further
intervention such as decortication
– If find very thick pleural peel , large amout of
debris , entrapment of lung decortication
Management
• Decortication
– An empyema cavity is formed when visceral
pleural fibrosis limits reexpansion of the
lung
– Thoracotomy , remove all fibrous tissue
from visceral and parietal pleura , all pus is
evacuated from pleural space
– Eliminated pleural sepsis
Management
• Open drainage
– Ribs resection : Chronic drainage of pleural
space
– Not to be performed too early because
exposure of pleural space to atmospheric
pressure will result in pneumothorax
– If ICD was unsuccessful or empyema
loculated
Parapneumonic effusion

Therapeutic thoracentesis

Yes All fluid removed ? No

Fluid recurs ? Bad prognostic factors ?

Yes No Yes No

Bad prognostic Continued Drain pleural Continued


factors ? Antibiotic with Antibiotic

No Yes
Tube thoracostomy and Thoracoscopy
fibrinolytics
Continued Repeat Therapeutic
Antibiotic thoracentesis
Successful Lung expand ?
Fluid recurs ?
Yes No No Yes
No Yes

Continued Decortication Continued


Continued Bad prognostic
Antibiotic Antibiotic
Antibiotic factors ?

No Yes Tube thoracostomy


Empyema thoracis
• Complication
– Septicemia
– Purulent pericarditis
– Cardiac tamponade
– Bronchopleural fistula
Empyema thoracis
• Purulent pericarditis
– Cardiac tamponade
• Increasse JVP
• Hypotension
• Narrowing blood pressure
• Distant heart sound
CHYLOTHORAX
Definition
• Chylothorax/chyliform pleural effusion
– pleural fluid with a turbid or milky white
appearance
– due to a high lipid content.
• chylothorax triglyceride (thoracic duct)
Anatomy of thoracic duct
Chyle composition
• The thoracic duct carries chyle
• Chyle has a high content of triglycerides in the form of
chylomicrons(milky, opalescent appearance)
• Contains lymphocytes (primarily T lymphocytes) 
bacteriostatic
• Electrolyte = plasma,
• Protein > 3 g/dL
• Contains all of the fat soluable vitamins absorbed from
the intestines.
Chyle composition
• Drain regions of the pulmonary parenchyma
and parietal pleura
• Flow increases with dietary intake of fat,
mainly long-chain triglycerides.
Etiology
Clinical presentation
• Signs and symptoms = pleural effusion
• Nontraumatic chylothoraces (gradual onset)
– decreased exercise tolerance
– dyspnea
– a heavy feeling in the chest
– fatigue
Pleural fluid analysis
• Thoracentesis
• Milky appearing fluid (chylothorax or a
chyliform pleural effusion)
• No milky appearance does not exclude
(especially if the patient is fasting or on a low
fat diet)
• Typically fails to clear after centrifugation
• pH = 7.40 - 7.80
Pleural fluid analysis
• Triglyceride
– >110 mg/dL  diagnosis
– < 50 mg/dL  excludes
– 50 - 100 mg/dL  should be followed by
lipoprotein analysis
• Detection of chylomicrons in the pleural fluid
by lipoprotein analysis confirms the presence
of a chylothorax
Management
• Controversy (no prospective studies exist to guide
therapy)
• Three principles should be applied
– Benefit from initial pleural space drainage with
nutritional support to surgical intervention
– Large volume drainage (>1L /d) will most likely require
early, aggressive surgical approaches.
– Prolonged drainage  prevent patients from
becoming immunosuppressed and malnourished,
(limits their tolerance of surgical therapy)
Management
• Nontraumatic chylothorax
– treat primary tumor or metastatic sites
– Pleural sclerosing agent
– Pleuroperitoneal or pleurovenous shunting
– No surgical ligation of the thoracic duct
• Nonsurgical traumatic chylothorax
– Chest tube drainage
– Surgical
CHYLIFORM PLEURAL EFFUSIONS
• A pseudochylothorax (chyliform effusion)
• Much rarer than a chylothorax
• Etiology
– Thickened pleura
– Calcified pleural surfaces
– Chronic pleural effusion (>5y)
CHYLIFORM PLEURAL EFFUSIONS
Pathogenesis

lysis of erythrocytes release • Cholesterol


and neutrophils in • Lecithin-globulin
pleural fluid complexes

Thickened poorly absorbed


Chyliform
pleural
effusion
membranes
Diagnosis
• History
– Long-standing pleural effusion
– Radiographic evidence of thickened or calcified
pleural membranes
• Fluid analysis
– Microscopic examinationcholesterol crystals
– Cholesterol > 250 mg/dL
– Triglyceride >110 mg/dL
– Chylomicrons are not present
Management
• TB has been excludedno specific therapy
• Resting dyspnea or diminished exercise
tolerance therapeutic thoracentesis
• Marked symptoms +underlying lung that
appears able to fully reexpand despite being
chronically collapse

Decortication +obliterate the pleural space

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