Bedside tracer gas technique accurately predicts outcome in aspiration of spontaneous pneumothorax
D G Kiely*, S Ansari, W A Davey, V Mahadevan, G J Taylor
, D Seaton
Department of
Respiratory Medicine, The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust, Ipswich IP4
5PD, UK
Correspondence to: Dr D Seaton douglas.seaton{at}ipsh-tr.anglox.nhs.uk
Received 28 September 2000; Returned to authors 18 December 2000; Revised version received 19 April 2001; Accepted for publication 23 April 2001
BACKGROUND
There is no
technique in general use that reliably predicts the outcome of manual
aspiration of spontaneous pneumothorax. We have hypothesised that the
absence of a pleural leak at the time of aspiration will identify a
group of patients in whom immediate discharge is unlikely to be
complicated by early lung re-collapse and have tested this hypothesis
by using a simple bedside tracer gas technique.
METHODS
Eighty four
episodes of primary spontaneous pneumothorax and 35 episodes of
secondary spontaneous pneumothorax were studied prospectively. Patients
breathed air containing a tracer (propellant gas from a pressurised
metered dose inhaler) while the pneumothorax was aspirated
percutaneously. Tracer gas in the aspirate was detected at the bedside
using a portable flame ioniser and episodes were categorised as tracer
gas positive (>1 part per million of tracer gas) or negative. The
presence of tracer gas was taken to imply a persistent pleural leak.
Failure of manual aspiration and the need for a further intervention
was based on chest radiographic appearances showing either failure of
the lung to re-expand or re-collapse following initial re-expansion.
RESULTS
A negative
tracer gas test alone implied that manual aspiration would be
successful in the treatment of 93% of episodes of primary spontaneous
pneumothorax (p<0.001) and in 86% of episodes of secondary
spontaneous pneumothorax (p=0.01). A positive test implied that manual
aspiration would either fail to re-expand the lung or that early
re-collapse would occur despite initial re-expansion in 66% of
episodes of primary spontaneous pneumothorax and 71% of episodes of
secondary spontaneous pneumothorax. Lung re-inflation on the chest
radiograph taken immediately after aspiration was a poor predictor of
successful aspiration, with lung re-collapse occurring in 34% of
episodes by the following day such that a further intervention was required.
CONCLUSIONS
National
guidelines currently recommend immediate discharge of patients with
primary spontaneous pneumothorax based primarily on the outcome of the
post-aspiration chest radiograph which we have shown to be a poor
predictor of early lung re-collapse. Using a simple bedside test in
combination with the post-aspiration chest radiograph, we can predict
with high accuracy the success of aspiration in achieving sustained
lung re-inflation, thereby identifying patients with primary
spontaneous pneumothorax who can be safely and immediately discharged
home and those who should be observed overnight because of a
significant risk of re-collapse, with an estimated re-admission rate of
1%.
Keywords: pneumothorax; tracer gas; aspiration; discharge
* Current address: Department of Respiratory Medicine, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield, UK.
Current address: Medical Research Council
Biostatistics Unit, Institute of Public Health, University of
Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
© 2001 by Thorax
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