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Thoracic Trauma

William E. Baker,Ron Medzon

DeckerMed Emergency Medicine(2020)

Cited 0|Views4
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Abstract
More than 85% of blunt and penetrating trauma to the thorax results in injury to the lungs or ribs. Among civilians, blunt trauma is the most common mechanism, while penetrating trauma is the most common among military sectors. This review describes the assessment and stabilization, diagnosis, treatment and disposition, and outcomes of thoracic trauma. Videos shows the “lung point” sign on M-mode and two-dimensional ultrasonography, and a transthoracic echocardiogram clip of pericardial clot and tamponade due to a gunshot wound. Figures show a sonogram showing the “lung point sign”, a chest x-ray and computed tomographic scan demonstrating right-sided hemothorax in a patient with a right chest stab wound, and a three-dimensional computed tomographic scan and chest x-ray of a blunt trauma patient with displaced fractures of the left lateral sixth to ninth ribs. Tables list types of injuries, NEXUS chest decision instrument imaging criteria, level 2 evidence-based recommendations for the management of pulmonary contusion and flail chest by the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma, Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma practice guidelines for managing issues with pulmonary contusion and flail chest, and the Vancouver simplified and University of Washington grading systems for blunt aortic injury. This review contains 2 videos, 4 highly rendered figures, 10 tables, and 94 references.
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