Anal Fissure
CODES
ICD9
- 455.0 Internal hemorrhoids without mention of complication
- 455.3 External hemorrhoids without mention of complication
- 455.6 Unspecified hemorrhoids without mention of complication
ICD10
- K64.0 First degree hemorrhoids
- K64.1 Second degree hemorrhoids
- K64.9 Unspecified hemorrhoids
HEMOTHORAX
Anthony C. Salazar
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Accumulation of blood in the intrapleural space after blunt/penetrating chest trauma or other nontraumatic etiology. Bleeding is usually a result of disruption of the tissues/vessels of the chest wall, pleura, or intrathoracic structures:
- Results in decreased vital capacity, hypoxia, and respiratory compromise.
- Loss of large intravascular volume results in hemodynamic instability and hemorrhagic shock.
- Massive hemothorax can cause increased intrathoracic pressure, resulting in compromised venous return and decreased cardiac output.
- Rarely a solitary finding in blunt trauma:
- Commonly associated with pneumothorax (25% of cases), extrathoracic injuries (73% of cases), and pulmonary contusion.
- Large hemothoraces cause the release of substances that can act as anticoagulants and contribute to continued intrathoracic bleeding.
- If left untreated, can lead to empyema and fibrothorax (lung trapping due to adhesions).
ETIOLOGY
- Traumatic injuries (including iatrogenic) to major blood vessels:
- Common vessels, including intercostal artery, internal mammary artery, pulmonary artery, pulmonary vein, aorta, vena cava, and heart are associated with hemorrhage into the thoracic cavity.
- Traumatic lung parenchymal injuries:
- Often stops spontaneously as a result of low pulmonary pressures and high concentrations of thromboplastin in the lung.
- Often associated with pneumothorax.
- Nontraumatic or spontaneous hemothoraces:
- Very rare.
- Consider coagulation disorder, malignancy, primary vascular event (such as aortic dissection, ruptured aneurysm), PE with infarction, infection (TB), bullous emphysema, pulmonary AV malformation, lobar sequestration.
- Torn pleural adhesions as a complication of spontaneous pneumothorax or tube thoracostomy
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Small amount of blood in thorax (<400 mL): Little or no change in patient’s appearance, vital signs, or physical findings
- Large amount of blood (>1,000 mL): Restlessness, anxiety, pallor, pleuritic chest pain, hemoptysis, dyspnea, or air hunger:
- Signs of shock with loss of blood volume ≥30% (1,500–2,000 mL).
- Tachycardia, tachypnea, hypotension.
- With insidious onset (i.e., malignancy): Dyspnea is the most common presenting sign since blood loss is usually not acute enough to produce a visible hemodynamic response.
History
- Acute blunt or penetrating trauma to chest.
- Recent rib fracture or flail chest.
- Delayed hemothorax can occur hours to days later without initial evidence of intrathoracic pathology on CXR; may be related to rupture of chest wall hematoma or disruption of intercostal vessels by rib fracture edges during movement.
- Malignancy or metastatic disease.
- Recent surgical procedure: Thoracentesis, thoracostomy, etc.
Physical-Exam
- Vitals signs: Depending on severity and time course, hypoxia, tachypnea, tachycardia, and hypotension maybe seen.
- Neck: JVD if increased intrathoracic pressure, tracheal deviation
- Chest inspection: Asymmetric expansion, gross deformity, paradoxical wall movement, abrasion, hematoma, and contusion
- Chest wall palpation: Tenderness or crepitus over ribs, clavicles, scapulae, or the sternum; SC emphysema, dullness to percussion
- Auscultation: Decreased or absent breath sounds over ipsilateral side (best appreciated in the upright patient)
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
CXR is the ideal diagnostic tool:
- In the hemodynamically stable patient, upright posteroanterior (PA) projection at full inspiration is optimal:
- Fluid collections >200–300 mL can usually be seen on upright or decubitus CXR.
- In a normal unscarred pleural space, fluid will be noted as a meniscus/fluid level blunting the costophrenic angle.
- In the supine anteroposterior (AP) radiograph (i.e., portable), up to 1,000 mL of blood may not be readily apparent:
- Only a slight hazy infiltrate over the involved hemithorax maybe seen.
- Look for associated injuries (pneumothorax, rib fractures, pulmonary contusion, widened mediastinum, etc.) when reading chest radiography.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Hematocrit may be helpful if it shows a drop or changes on serial evaluations.
- Type and cross-match.
- Pulse oximetry, ABG
- Pleural fluid removed should reveal a hematocrit >50% of the blood hematocrit.
Imaging
- US diagnostic imaging is a valuable tool in the evaluation of intrapleural fluid collection:
- An extended FAST scan can diagnose hemothorax with a higher sensitivity than a portable CXR in trained hands.
- CT is useful in detecting small amounts of intrapleural fluid not visible on the chest radiograph.
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Hemopneumothorax
- Pneumothorax
- Pulmonary contusion
- Pleural effusion
- Empyema/pneumonia
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Assess vital signs and pulse oximetry; administer oxygen and obtain IV access.
- Fluid resuscitation as needed for hypotension
- Cautions:
- Difficult to differentiate hemothoraces from pneumothoraces clinically:
- All may present with dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, decreased breath sounds, and hemodynamic instability.
- Certain clues aid in making the diagnosis, such as SC emphysema for pneumothorax and dullness to percussion for hemothorax.
- Perform needle thoracostomy for potential tension pneumothorax if the patient is hemodynamically unstable.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Manage airway, breathing, circulation:
- Control airway as needed; endotracheal intubation for patients with impending respiratory failure
- Supplemental oxygen
- 2 large-bore IV access sites and fluid bolus to restore circulating blood volume
- Needle thoracostomy should be performed in patients with hemodynamic instability unless chest tube kit is immediately available.
- Patient should be positioned to sit upright unless contraindicated.
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Obtain upright CXR as quickly as possible, but if patient unstable do not wait to administer definitive therapy.
- Hemothorax is treated by evacuating accumulated blood in the intrapleural space.
- Tube thoracostomy evacuates blood; allows for re-expansion of the lung, as well as constant monitoring of blood loss.
- Tube thoracostomy:
- Use a large-bore chest tube (36–40Fr).
- Insert in the 4th–5th intercostal space at the mid-axillary line aiming posteriorly and superiorly.
- Tube is then connected to underwater-seal drainage and suction (20–30 mL H
2
O).
- Correct placement and adequate drainage is confirmed via CXR.
- Autotransfusion should be used if available to replace blood loss.
- Indications for OR thoracotomy:
- Initial tube drainage >20 mL/kg of blood (or 1,000 mL of blood for adults from the pleural cavity).
- Persistent bleeding at a rate >7 mL/kg/hr (or 200 mL/hr for 4 hr).
- Increasing hemothorax seen on chest radiography.
- Patient remains hypotensive despite adequate blood replacement and other sites of blood loss have been ruled out.
- Patient decompensates after initial response to resuscitation.
- Indications for ED thoracotomy:
- Penetrating trauma:
- Traumatic arrest in the ED or within 10 min of ED arrival.
- Severe shock with clinical signs of cardiac tamponade
- Blunt trauma: Traumatic arrest in the ED at a trauma center or with surgeon available within 10 min
MEDICATION
- Local anesthetics for cutaneous anesthesia prior to tube thoracostomy in awake, conscious patients
- Procedural sedation (midazolam) and analgesia (fentanyl) may be used for stable, awake patients prior to tube thoracostomy:
- Fentanyl: Adult/peds: 2–5 μg/kg per dose
- Midazolam: Adult/peds: 0.02–0.04 mg/kg per dose
- Other sedative agents may be considered.
FOLLOW-UP