• Injury · May 2024

    Pneumopericardium following severe thoracic trauma.

    • Jason D Sciarretta, Soroosh Noorbakhsh, Yoo Joung, Daniel W Bailey, Mari Freedberg, Jonathan Nguyen, Randi N Smith, Patricia Ayoung-Chee, Millard A Davis, Elizabeth R Benjamin, and S Rob Todd.
    • Emory University School of Medicine, 2015 Uppergate Dr, Atlanta, GA 30307, US; Grady Memorial Hospital, 80 Jesse Hill Jr Drive SE Atlanta, GA 30303, US.
    • Injury. 2024 May 1; 55 (5): 111303111303.

    BackgroundTraumatic pneumopericardium (PPC) is a rare clinical entity associated with chest trauma, resulting from a pleuropericardial connection in the presence of a pneumothorax, interstitial air tracking along the pulmonary perivascular sheaths from ruptured alveoli to the pericardium, or direct trachea-bronchial-pericardial communication.  Our objectives were to describe the modern management approach to PPC and to identify variables that could improve survival with severe thoracic injury.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective study of the trauma registry between 2015 and 2022 at a Level I verified adult trauma center for all patients with PPC. Demographics, injury patterns, and treatment characteristics were compared between blunt and penetrating trauma. This study focused on the management strategies and the physiologic status regarding PPC and the development of tension physiology. The main outcome measure was operative versus nonoperative management.ResultsOver a seven-year period, there were 46,389 trauma admissions, of which 488 patients had pneumomediastinum. Eighteen patients were identified with PPC at admission. Median age was 39.5 years (range, 18-77 years), predominantly male (n = 16, 89 %), Black (n = 12, 67 %), and the majority from blunt trauma (78 %). Half had subcutaneous emphysema on presentation while 39 % had recognizable pneumomediastinum on chest x-ray. Tube thoracostomy was the most common intervention in this cohort (89 %). Despite tube thoracostomy, tension PPC was observed in three patients, two mandating emergent pericardial windows for progression to tension physiology, and the remaining requiring reconstruction of a blunt tracheal disruption. The majority of PPC patients recovered with expectant management (83 %), and no deaths were directly related to PPC.ConclusionsTraumatic PPC is a rare radiographic finding with the majority successfully managed conservatively in a monitored ICU setting. These patients often have severe thoracic injury with concomitant injuries requiring thoracostomy alone; however, emergent surgical intervention may be required when PPC progresses to tension physiology to improve overall survival.Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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