Review - Surgery
Review - Surgery
Review - Surgery
Increased respiratory
Scared for pain -> tract secretion
Signs:
Local tenderness or deformity at site of rib fracture + Bony crepitus + Referred tenderness on
anteroposterior compression of chest wall (+).
Paradoxical respiratory movement.
X-ray.
11. Treatment:
Relief of pain: Analgesic drug, immobilization of chest wall, intercostal nerve block.
Prevention of complication: Encourage cough and expectoration, prevention of atelectasis of
lung, and pneumonia, antibiotics.
12. Treatment of paradoxical respiratory movement:
Pressure bandaging of chest wall.
Traction fixation of chest wall: For more extensive flail chest or if pressure bandage fails to be
effective.
Surgical fixation of chest wall at the site of rib fracture: In cases needing exploratory
thoracotomy or open rib fracture needing debridement and suture.
Internal fixation with the use of respirator for assist respiration: An intratracheal intubation or a
tracheotomy, usually for 2-3 weeks.
Traumatic pneumothorax
13. Traumatic pneumothorax: The collection of air in pleural cavity caused by trauma, e.g. laceration of
lung, rupture of bronchus or perforating wound of chest wall.
14. Closed pneumothorax: Often in closed chest injury/chest wall injury.
Pathophysiology: Partial lung collapse and Effect to respiratory or circulatory function is limited.
Clinical manifestation:
Chest pain, chest oppression sensation + some shortness of breath.
Signs of air collection in chest cavity: Deviation of trachea toward normal side, tympanitic sound
on chest percussion, respiratory sound diminished or abolished on injured side.
X-ray examination: Collection of air in chest cavity + lung collapse or compression.
Treatment:
< 30%: No particular treatment, can absorb itself 1-2 weeks.
30-50% lung collapse: Thoracentesis with aspiration of air or closed chest drainage for early lung
expansion.
Antibiotics.
15. Tension pneumothorax: Often seen in lung laceration.
Characteristics: One way leakage and rapid accumulation of air resulting in rapid rise in
intrapleural pressure mach higher than the atmospheric pressure (positive intrapleural) pressure.
Clinical manifestation:
Extreme respiratory difficulty, acute respiratory failure or asphyxia (excessive perspiration
irritability, exhaustion, cyanosis). Circulatory failure or shock.
Signs of collection of air in chest cavity, subcutaneous emphysema or mediastinal emphysema.
Not suitable to move the patient for further X-ray examination.
Treatment: Emergency management - Immediate thoracentesis to withdraw air for decompression
of tension pneumothorax.
16. Open pneumothorax- Often seen in firing weapon/ shell fragment.
Characteristics: Air coming in and out the chest cavity through the opening of open chest wound.
Pathophysiology:
Loss of intrapleural negative pressure.
Mediastinal flutter: Intrapleural pressure is greater on injured side than it is on normal side and
the pressure difference is even greater in inspiration than it is in expiration results in
mediastinum moves more toward normal side in expiration than it is in inspiration.
Clinical manifestations:
Respiratory functional impairment: Respiratory distress, circulatory functional impairment or
even shock.
Signs of collection of air in the chest.
Chest wall open wound: Wheezing.
Treatment:
Urgent closure of wound to convert an open pneumothorax into a closed pneumothorax with
any dressing available.
Beware of a concomitant large chest wall defect and a resultant flail chest wall.
Beware of sudden change of open pneumothorax into a tension pneumothorax.
Correction of shock, debridement and suture of chest wall open wound, and closed chest
drainage.
Exploratory thoracotomy as indicated.
Prevention of infection.
Traumatic hemothorax
17. Source of hemorrhage:
Bleeding from laceration of lung. Bleeding usually stops spontaneously because of low
pulmonary arterial pressure.
Bleeding from intercostal or chest wall blood vessels. Does not stop easily because of higher
systemic arterial pressure.
Bleeding from heart and great vessels. Bleeding is excessive and rapidly cause shock or death of
the patient.
18. Pathophysiology:
Loss of blood volume: Signs of internal bleeding (rapid and feeble pulse, blood pressure lowering,
increased respiratory rate etc, signs of hypovolemic shock.)
Blood collection in chest: Causing lung compression and mediastinal shift → impaired
respiratory and circulatory functions.
19. Method of judging whether there is active bleeding:
Increasing pulse rate and progressive lowering of blood pressure.
No rise or stability of blood pressure after blood or fluid replacement.
Continuing lowering of blood HB and RBC level.
Increasing shadow of hemothorax on successive chest films.
Amount of chest drainage each hour >200ml in 3 successive hours, or amount of chest drainage >
1000ml observed in a short period of time (< 6 hours).
20. Treatment:
Non progressive hemothorax:
Spontaneous absorption and clearance if the amount is small.
Removal of hemothorax by thoracentesis or chest drainage.
Prevention of infection.
Progressive hemothorax:
Replacement of blood volume.
Exploratory thoracotomy as needed control of bleeding and evacuation of hemothorax.
Clotted hemothorax: Remove clotting.
Organized hemothorax: Operative decortication of the lung to be performed 4-6 weeks after
injury to remove the fibrous layer for reexpansion of lung and recovery of pulmonary function.
21. How to diagnose infected clotted pneumothorax?
Toxic symptoms of infection: high fever, chill, leucocytosis.
Cell count of pleural fluid - RBC: WBC ratio is <100:1.
Bacteria found on smear or culture (+) of pleural fluid.
Hemopericardium
22. Hemopericardium: The bleeding and collection of blood in pericardiac sac after thoracic trauma.
Mostly are seen in penetrating wounds of the chest with sharp things.
23. Pathophysiology: Collection of blood in pericardiac sac leads to increased intrapericardiac pressure
and cardiac tamponade causing decreased venous return and cardiac output, then increased venous
pressure and decreased cardiac output. The patient will suffer from acute circulatory collapse. Acute
cardiac tamponade may occur even after 100~200ml blood collection or occasionally even after
50ml blood collection.
24. Clinical manifestations & diagnosis:
Beck’s triad: Venous pressure ↑ (>15cmH2O); Arterial pressure ↓; Feeble, pulse and distant
heart sound.
Diagnostic point: Location of opened chest wound + venous pressure ↑, arterial pressure ↓ and
pulse pressure ↓ + clinical feature of circulatory failure.
25. Treatment:
Urgent pericardiocentesis if cardiac tamponade is suspected to relieve intrapericardiac pressure
& for temporary decompression before emergency surgery is undertaken.
Surgical repair of cardiac wound.
26. Traumatic asphyxia: It is often resulted from sudden severe compression injury of the chest with
reflex closure of glottis. As a result, there is sudden rise of intrathoracic pressure and retrograde
reflux of venous toward head, neck and shoulders. Such refluxed blood under high pressure then
causes rupture of capillaries and extravaration into the tissue of head, neck and shoulder regions.
Treatment: Management of bleeding according to its site and severity and Oxygen inhalation.
27. Blast injury of the lung: As result of sudden explosion, blast pressure transmitted through air or
water medium causes sudden enormous blast to the chest wall and concomitant further pressure
wave transmitted through the glottis and trachea in reaching bronchioles and alveoli. This sudden
pressure increase in bronchioles and alveoli causes sudden rise of intrapulmonary pressure and
rupture of bronchioles and alveoli.
Treatment: Steroids + oxygen inhalation; Intermittent positive pressure breathing (IPPB) with a
respirator in serious cases.
Stage I a/b Tumor of any size is found only in the lung Surgery
Chapter 14. Primary Mediastinal Tumor (tmbhin characteristic location n neurogenic tumors)
1. Primary mediastinal tumor: Arises from the mediastinal structures. Mediastinal tumors are a
heterogenous group of neoplasms. 60%--neurogenic tumors, thymomas, and benign cyst; 30%--
lymphoma, teratoma; 10%--others. Overall it is rare.
2. Neurofibroma: Usually in posterior mediastinum, asymptomatic, in young adults & may be multiple
(benign).
3. Schwannoma: Most common mediastinal neurogenic tumor (benign), also called neurilemoma &
usually in posterior mediastinum, asymptomatic, in young adults. It may present with symptoms of
esophageal or nerve root compression.
4. Teratomas: Usually contain tissue derived from at least 2 of 3 germ cell layers - endoderm,
mesoderm, ectoderm. Encapsulated mass by the presence of cyst and solid area. In anterosuperior
mediastinum, usually children or young adults (mean age 20 years).
5. The four most common anterior and superior mediastinal tumors are thymomas, teratomas,
lymphomas, and enlarged or ectopic thyroid tissue. These are often referred to as the "4 T's"
(Thymoma, Teratoma, Terrible lymphoma, and Thyroid).
6. Clinical manifestations:
Cough, hemoptysis, shortness of breath, wheezing.
Chest pain, hoarseness, loss weight, dysphagia.
SVC syndrome.
Horner’s syndrome- Partial Ptosis, Anhydrosis, Myosis, Enophthalmos.
Paraplegia: When the level of compression occurs below the first thoracic spinal nerve.
7. Diagnosis: History + PE, X-ray, CT/ CT guided needle biopsy, MRI, Ultrasound, Thyroid iodine scan,
Cervical lymph node biopsy, Mediastinoscopy and bronchoscopy, Angiography.
8. Treatment: Surgery - For all primary mediastinal tumor except lymphomas (radiation therapy);
Radiation/ chemotherapy.
2. Etiology:
Mechanism of stone formation: Nucleation theory, Crystal inhibitor theory, Anderson-Carr-
Randall theory.
Local factors: Obstruction, infection, foreign body (center stone).
Systematic factors:
Metabolic disorder: Hyperparathyroidism, hypercalciuria (calcium calculi), hyperoxaluria,
hyperuricosuria (uric acid stones).
Malnutrition.
Environmental factors: Geography, climate, high mineral in water.
Others:
Drugs: cortical hormone, vit C, Vit D
Milk: San Lu (Melamine).
Food: Spinach.
3. Pathophysiology: Obstruction, infection, injury, canceration.
4. Treatment principles of bilateral upper tract urinary stone:
When ureteral stone on one side and renal stone on the other side, the ureter stone should be
dealt with firstly.
When bilateral ureter stones, one which is suffered from obstruction more serious should be
dealt with.
When bilateral renal stones, the simple and safe side should be dealt with firstly.
When stone lead to anuria, we should relief obstruction as fast as we can.