Medical College of Wisconsin
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Management of complex pleural disease in the critically ill patient. J Thorac Dis 2021 Aug;13(8):5205-5222

Date

09/17/2021

Pubmed ID

34527360

Pubmed Central ID

PMC8411157

DOI

10.21037/jtd-2021-31

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85113529491 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   3 Citations

Abstract

Disorders of the pleural space are quite common in the critically ill patient. They are generally associated with the underlying illness. It is sometimes difficult to assess for pleural space disorders in the ICU given the instability of some patients. Although the portable chest X-ray remains the primary modality of diagnosis for pleural disorders in the ICU. It can be nonspecific and may miss subtle findings. Ultrasound has become a useful tool to the bedside clinician to aid in diagnosis and management of pleural disease. The majority of pleural space disorders resolve as the patient's illness improves. There remain a few pleural processes that need specific therapies. While uncomplicated parapneumonic effusions do not have their own treatments. Those that progress to become a complex infected pleural space can have its individual complexity in therapy. Chest tube drainage remains the cornerstone in therapy. The use of intrapleural fibrinolytics has decreased the need for surgical referral. A large hemothorax or pneumothorax in patients admitted to the ICU represent medical emergencies and require emergent action. In this review we focus on the management of commonly encountered complex pleural space disorders in critically ill patients such as complicated pleural space infections, hemothoraces and pneumothoraces.

Author List

Hu K, Chopra A, Kurman J, Huggins JT

Author

Kurt Hu MD Assistant Professor in the Medicine department at Medical College of Wisconsin