Chest tube

Revision as of 02:27, 17 July 2011 by Jswartz (talk | contribs)

Indications

  1. Traumatic Pneumothorax
  2. Spontaneous Pneumothorax (some)
  3. Hemothorax
  4. Abscess
  5. Empyema

Relative Indications

  1. Rib fx and positive pressure ventilation
  2. Profound hypoxia/hypotension in pt with penetrating chest injury
  3. Profound hypoxia/hypotension and signs of hemothorax

Relative Contraindications

  1. Overlying skin infection

Equipment Needed

  1. Chest Tube Tray
  2. Sterile drapes
  3. Silk sutures
  4. Curved clamps
  5. Syringes and needles for anesthesia
  6. Scapel
  7. Lidocaine
  8. Betadine
  9. Sterile gown/gloves
  10. Face shield
  11. Chest tube
    1. 18-20F for pneumothorax
    2. 32-26F for hemothorax
    3. 38-40F for trauma pt
  12. Pleur-evac

Procedure

  1. Expose insertion site by moving upper extremity above head on affected side
    1. Insertion site = midaxillary line at 4th/5th intercostal space (~nipple line in males, 5cm above the sternoxiphoid junction in females)
  2. Clean w/ betadine and drape
  3. Confirm rib space and anesthetize w/ 10-20cc of lido w/ epi
    1. Must anesthetize skin, soft tissue, muscle, periosteum, and pleural space
  4. Incise along upper border of the lower rib of the intercostal space
    1. Ensure that incision is large enough to fit your finger through
  5. Use curved clamp to bluntly dissect through the muscleuntil you reach the rib
  6. Angle the clamp to go above and over the rib and push until enter the pleural space
  7. Open the clamp and pull it out with the clamp still open to create a larger tract
  8. Clamp the prox end of the chest tube and pass it along the tract into the pleural cavity
    1. It helps to have your finger in the tract and pass the tube along your finger
  9. Once in the space, remove the clamp
  10. Feed the chest tube until all the holes are inside the thoracic cavity
    1. Aim toward apex for ptx; aim toward bottom for hemothorax
  11. Attach distal end of tube to the pleur-evac and place on suction
  12. Secure tube with silk suture and cover with gauze and cloth tape
  13. Obtain CXR position of tube

Complications

  1. Bleeding (causing a hemothorax)
  2. Infection
  3. Damage to nerves/vessels/heart/lung/diaphragm/abdomen
  4. Air leak
  5. Improper positioning of the tube
  6. Tension pneumothorax
  7. Failure to drain

See Also

Source

http://www.trauma.org/archive/thoracic/CHESTdrain.html