Successful Needle Aspiration of a Traumatic Pneumothorax: A Case Report and Literature Review

Author:

Bettoni Giuseppe1,Gheda Silvia1,Altomare Michele23,Cioffi Stefano Piero Bernardo23ORCID,Ferrazzi Davide1,Cazzaniga Michela1,Bonacchini Luca1ORCID,Cimbanassi Stefania34ORCID,Aseni Paolo15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine, ASST Grande Ospedale Metropolitano Niguarda, 20162 Milan, Italy

2. Advanced Technologies in Surgery, Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Rome Sapienza, 00185 Rome, Italy

3. General Surgery Trauma Team, ASST Grande Ospedale Metropolitano Niguarda, 20162 Milan, Italy

4. Department of Pathophysiology and Transplantation, University of Milan, 20122 Milan, Italy

5. Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences “L. Sacco”, Università degli Studi di Milano, 20157 Milan, Italy

Abstract

Traumatic pneumothorax (PTX) occurs in up to 50% of patients with severe polytrauma and chest injuries. Patients with a traumatic PTX with clinical signs of tension physiology and hemodynamic instability are typically treated with an urgent decompressive thoracostomy, tube thoracostomy, or needle decompression. There is recent evidence that non-breathless patients with a hemodynamically stable traumatic PTX can be managed conservatively through observation or a percutaneous pigtail catheter. We present here a 52-year-old woman who presented to the emergency department with a 55 mm traumatic PTX. Following aspiration of 1500 mL of air, a clinical improvement was immediately observed, allowing the patient to be discharged shortly thereafter. In hemodynamically stable patients with a post-traumatic PTX, without specific risk factors or oxygen desaturation, observation or simple needle aspiration can be a reasonable approach. Although the recent medical literature supports conservative management of small traumatic PTXs, guidelines are lacking for hemodynamically stable patients with a significantly large PTX. This case report documents our successful experience with needle aspiration in such a setting of large traumatic PTX. We aimed in this article to review the available literature on needle aspiration and conservative treatment of traumatic pneumothorax. A total of 12 studies were selected out of 190 articles on traumatic PTX where conservative treatment and chest tube decompression were compared. Our case report offers a novel contribution by illustrating the successful resolution of a sizable pneumothorax through needle aspiration, suggesting that even a large PTX in a hemodynamically stable patient, without other risk conditions, can be successfully treated conservatively with simple needle aspiration in order to avoid tube thoracostomy complications.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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4. Tube thoracostomy: Complications and its management;Kesieme;Pulm. Med.,2012

5. Complications following thoracic trauma managed with tube thoracostomy;Menger;Injury,2012

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