Pneumothorax Disease

DESCRIPTION
Accumulation of air or gas between the parietal and visceral pleurae.
  • Spontaneous pneumothorax - may be primary or secondary
    • Primary in young and otherwise healthy patients
    • Secondary - as a complication of an underlying lung disease
  • Traumatic pneumothorax - may coexist with hemothorax
  • Tension pneumothorax - the air in the pleural space is under higher pressure than air in adjacent lung and vascular structures
  • System(s) affected: Pulmonary, Cardiovascular
  • Genetics: No known genetic pattern, possible congenital predisposition in thin, tall young men
  • Incidence/Prevalence in USA: 9/100,000
  • Predominant age: Adults 20-40 years
  • Predominant sex: Male > Female
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Chest pain, sudden, sharp, made worse by breathing, coughing or moving the chest
  • Chest movements - asymmetrical
  • Dyspnea
  • Cyanosis (sometimes)
  • Moderate to severe - profound respiratory distress
  • Tension pneumothorax - weak, rapid pulse, pallor, neck vein distension, anxiety, tracheal deviation
  • Shock
  • Circulatory collapse
  • Diminished breath sounds and voice sounds
CAUSES
  • Perforation of the visceral pleura and entry of gas from the lung
  • Gas generated by microorganisms in an empyema
  • Penetration of the chest wall, diaphragm, mediastinum, or esophagus
  • Blunt trauma to thorax
RISK FACTORS
  • Trauma (broken rib, ruptured bronchus, perforated esophagus)
  • Rupture of superficial lung bulla following cough or blowing a musical instrument
  • Vigorous or stretching exercises
  • Flying (high altitude) after loss of pressurization
  • Diving (at ascension or rapid decompression)
  • Pneumoconioses
  • Tuberculosis
  • Pneumonia due to TB, Klebsiella, Staph aureus
  • Subpleural Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) (in AIDS patients on PCP prophylaxis via pentamidine aerosol)
  • Bronchial obstruction
  • COPD (particularly emphysema)
  • Asthma
  • Neoplasms
  • Endometriosis (during menstruation)
  • Rare diseases (Marfan's, Ehlers-Danlos)
  • Rupture of an infected abscess
  • Lymphangioleiomyomatosis
  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Cigarette smoking
  • Intubation ventilation
LABORATORY
  • Arterial blood gases in significant pneumothorax
    • pH < 7.35
    • pO2 < 80 mm Hg (10.6 kPa)
    • pCO2 > 45 mm Hg (6.0 kPa)

Drugs that may alter lab results: N/A
Disorders that may alter lab results: N/A

PATHOLOGICAL FINDINGS
N/A
SPECIAL TESTS
N/A
IMAGING
  • Chest x-ray:
    • Air without lung markings peripherally, mediastinal shift to contralateral side
    • Small pneumothorax may be evident only with expiratory or lateral decubitus film
DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURES
Careful history and physical. The physical findings depend on size of pneumothorax.
APPROPRIATE HEALTH CARE
  • Outpatient - lung collapse less than 30%, no dyspnea, no signs of tension pneumothorax, no underlying lung disease
  • Inpatient - if more than 30% collapse, tension or underlying lung disease
GENERAL MEASURES
  • Outpatient
    • Bed rest
    • Monitoring blood pressure, pulse rate, respirations
    • Oxygen at high concentration will accelerate rate of absorption by 4 times
    • Treatment of any underlying condition
SURGICAL MEASURES
  • Inpatient
    • Simple aspiration - insert 16 gauge cannula into 2nd anterior intercostal space at midclavicular line and attach a 3-way stopcock and 60 mL syringe. Withdraw air manually until no more can be aspirated.
    • Thoracotomy tube - inserted in 4th, 5th or 6th intercostal space at midaxillary line and connect underwater seal
    • Tension pneumothorax - insert 19 gauge or larger needle into the chest and attach a 3-way stopcock. Use a large syringe to withdraw air. Follow with tube insertion
    • Pulmonary edema can be a complication of re-expansion
  • Recurrent pneumothorax (more often occurs with larger pneumothoraces)
    • Can cause severe disability
    • Consider thoracoscopy or thoracotomy following 2 or more spontaneous pneumothoraces, if lungs not expanded after 7 days therapy or persistent bronchopleural fistula
    • Consider pleurodesis with talc or other agents
ACTIVITY
  • Bed rest until re-expanded
  • No air travel until x-ray normal
DIET

No special diet

PATIENT EDUCATION

Stop smoking

PREVENTION/AVOIDANCE

No preventive measures known, but patients may avoid some risk factors, e.g., exposure to high altitudes, flying in unpressurized aircraft, scuba diving, smoking

POSSIBLE COMPLICATIONS
  • Re-expansion pulmonary edema following suction
  • Bronchopleural fistulae requiring surgical repair
  • Surgery indicated following 2 spontaneous pneumothoraces on the same side
EXPECTED COURSE AND PROGNOSIS
  • Air reabsorbed from small spontaneous pneumothorax in a few days
  • Air reabsorbed from larger air space in 2-4 weeks
  • Risk of recurrence is 30-50%
ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS

Listed with Causes

AGE-RELATED FACTORS

Pediatric: Unusual in this age group except following trauma
Geriatric: Higher morbidity and mortality
Others: N/A

PREGNANCY

A known, but unusual complication of labor and delivery. It should be suspected in the pregnant patient with dyspnea and chest pain.

OTHER NOTES

Chest pain may simulate an acute MI or acute abdomen

ABBREVIATIONS

MI = myocardial infarction

Clinical Investigations

ROLE OF HOMOEOPATHY

Copyright © 2025 Selkey. All Rights Reserved.