Pulmonary contusion
Authors:
A. Stolz; J. Schützner; R. Lischke
Authors place of work:
3. chirurgická klinika 1. LF Univerzity Karlovy a FN Motol, Praha
přednosta: prof. MUDr. R. Lischke, Ph. D.
Published in the journal:
Rozhl. Chir., 2017, roč. 96, č. 12, s. 488-492.
Category:
Review
Summary
Pulmonary contusion is a common finding after blunt chest trauma. It occurs in 23–35% of all cases. Alveolar capillaries are injured due to the trauma, which results in accumulation of blood and other fluids within lung tissue. The fluids interfere with gas exchange, leading to hypoxemia. The consequences of pulmonary contusion include ventilation/perfusion mismatching, increased AV shunts and loss of compliance of lung parenchyma. These physiological consequences are manifested within hours from injury and usually resolve in 7 days. Computed tomography (CT) is a sensitive and main diagnostic tool. Clinical symptoms include hypoxemia and hypercapnia, manifested predominantly during 72 hours from injury. Patients are treated primarily conservatively; surgery may be needed due to haemothorax associated with lung contusion or progression of AV shunts due to localized pulmonary contusion.
Key words:
pulmonary contusion − blunt chest trauma − computed tomography
Zdroje
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Štítky
Surgery Orthopaedics Trauma surgeryČlánok vyšiel v časopise
Perspectives in Surgery
2017 Číslo 12
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