Flail chest overview: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Bone fractures]]
[[Category:Chest trauma]]
[[Category:Chest trauma]]
[[Category:Emergency medicine]]
[[Category:Emergency medicine]]
[[Category:Needs overview]]
[[Category:Needs overview]]

Latest revision as of 19:12, 8 February 2013

Flail chest Microchapters

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

A flail chest is a life-threatening medical condition that occurs when a segment of the chest wall breaks under extreme stress and becomes detached from the rest of the chest wall. It occurs when multiple adjacent ribs are broken in multiple places, separating a segment, so a part of the chest wall moves independently. The number of ribs that must be broken varies by differing definitions: some sources say at least two adjacent ribs are broken in at least two places,[1] some require three or more ribs in two or more places.[2] The flail segment moves in the opposite direction as the rest of the chest wall: because of the ambient pressure in comparison to the pressure inside the lungs, it goes in while the rest of the chest is moving out, and vice versa. This so-called "paradoxical motion" can increase the work and pain involved in breathing. Studies have found that up to half of people with flail chest die. Flail chest is invariably accompanied by pulmonary contusion, a bruise of the lung tissue that can interfere with blood oxygenation.[3] Often, it is the contusion, not the flail segment, that is the main cause of respiratory failure in patients with both injuries.

Causes

It is a serious, life-threatening chest injury often associated with underlying pulmonary injury and is most commonly seen in cases of significant blunt trauma. This typically occurs when three or more ribs are fractured in two or more places, allowing that segment of the thoracic wall to displace and move independently of the rest of the chest wall. Flail chest can also occur when ribs are fractured proximally in conjunction with disarticulation of costochondral cartilages distally. For the condition to occur, generally there must be a significant force applied over a large surface of the thorax to create the multiple anterior and posterior rib fractures. Rollover and crushing injuries most commonly break ribs at only one point– for flail chest to occur a significant impact is required, breaking the ribs in two or more places.

References

  1. Emergency Nurses Association (2005). Sheehy's Manual of Emergency Care (6th ed.). St Loius, Missouri: Elsevier Mosby. pp. 655–657. Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (help)
  2. Keel M, Meier C (2007). "Chest injuries - what is new?". Current Opinion in Critical Care. 13 (6): 674–9. doi:10.1097/MCC.0b013e3282f1fe71. PMID 17975389. Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  3. Yamamoto L, Schroeder C, Morley D, Beliveau C (2005). "Thoracic trauma: The deadly dozen". Critical Care Nursing Quarterly. 28 (1): 22–40. PMID 15732422.

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