• Injury · Sep 2014

    Review

    Management of a pneumopericardium due to penetrating trauma.

    • Andrew J Nicol, Pradeep H Navsaria, Martijn Hommes, Sorin Edu, and Delawir Kahn.
    • Trauma Centre, Department of Surgery, Groote Schuur Hospital, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa. Electronic address: andrew.nicol@uct.ac.za.
    • Injury. 2014 Sep 1;45(9):1368-72.

    IntroductionA pneumopericardium presenting after penetrating chest trauma is a rare event. The surgical management of this clinical problem has not been clearly defined. The aim of this study was to document the mode of presentation and to suggest a protocol for management.Patient And MethodsA review of a prospectively collected cardiac database of patients presenting to Groote Schuur Hospital Trauma Centre between October 2001 and February 2009 with a pneumopericardium on chest X-ray after penetrating trauma.ResultsThere were 27 patients with a pneumopericardium (mean age 25 years, range 17-36). The mechanism of injury was a stab wound to the chest in 26 patients and a single patient with multiple low velocity gunshot wounds. Six patients (22%) were unstable and required emergency surgery. One of these patients presented with a tension pneumopericardium. Twenty-one patients were initially stable. Two of these (10%) patients later developed a tension pneumopericardium within 24-h and were taken to theatre. The remaining 19 patients were managed with a subxiphoid pericardial window (SPW) at between 24 and 48h post admission. Ten of these 19 patients (52%) were positive for a haemopericardium. Only 4 of the 19 underwent a sternotomy and only two of these had cardiac injuries that had sealed. There were no deaths in this series.ConclusionPatients with a penetrating chest injury with a pneumopericardium who are unstable require emergency surgery. A delayed tension pneumopericardium developed in 10% of patients who were initially stable. It is our recommendation that all stable patients with a pneumopericardium after penetrating chest trauma should undergo a SPW. A sternotomy is not required in stable patients.Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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