Flail chest

Flail chest injury

3 or more ribs fractured at 2 or more places on the rib shaft - results in area with loss of continuity with rest of rib cage and has potential to move independently during respiratory cycle

 

Implications of flail chest

  1. High mechanism injury (one rib = 150mls blood loss)
    • Possible underlying pulmonary contusion
  2. Can lead to respiratory embarassement
    • Exhibit paradoxical movement during respiratory cycle - moves inwards on inspiration
    • Pain from fracture leads to reduced TV
    • Type II (mechanical) failure can result
  3. Late complications: pneumonia, septicaemia, atelectasis
    • Reduced ventilation increases risk of retained secretions and sequlae

Managment

According to ATLS principles

  1. Manage flail chest
    • Humified oxygen
    • Analgesia - paracetamol / NSAIDS / Opiates / intercostal block / thoracic epidural (up to T4) + splinting of injury
    • Intubation / mechanical ventilation - if worsening fatigue and RR
  2. Identify underlying injury
  3. Prevention of secondary complications

Sucking Chest wound

  • Occurs when wall defect 2/3 size of trachea diameter
  • Air enters chest through hole rather than trachea
  • Can lead to tension pneumo
  • Rx: 3-sided dressing acting as flutter valve