Complications associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomies: a rapid review

Abstract Background Open thoracostomies have become the standard of care in pre-hospital critical care in patients with chest injuries receiving positive pressure ventilation. The procedure has embedded itself as a rapid method to decompress air or fluid in the chest cavity since its original descri...

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Autores principales: Stian Mohrsen, Niall McMahon, Alasdair Corfield, Sinéad McKee
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: BMC 2021
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:11561a6f21e44e72bcf3fe3016e0be282021-12-05T12:10:52ZComplications associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomies: a rapid review10.1186/s13049-021-00976-11757-7241https://doaj.org/article/11561a6f21e44e72bcf3fe3016e0be282021-12-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.1186/s13049-021-00976-1https://doaj.org/toc/1757-7241Abstract Background Open thoracostomies have become the standard of care in pre-hospital critical care in patients with chest injuries receiving positive pressure ventilation. The procedure has embedded itself as a rapid method to decompress air or fluid in the chest cavity since its original description in 1995, with a complication rate equal to or better than the out-of-hospital insertion of indwelling pleural catheters. A literature review was performed to explore potential negative implications of open thoracostomies and discuss its role in mechanically ventilated patients without clinical features of pneumothorax. Main findings A rapid review of key healthcare databases showed a significant rate of complications associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomies. Of 352 thoracostomies included in the final analysis, 10.6% (n = 38) led to complications of which most were related to operator error or infection (n = 26). Pneumothoraces were missed in 2.2% (n = 8) of all cases. Conclusion There is an appreciable complication rate associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomy. Based on a risk/benefit decision for individual patients, it may be appropriate to withhold intervention in the absence of clinical features, but consideration must be given to the environment where the patient will be monitored during care and transfer. Chest ultrasound can be an effective assessment adjunct to rule in pneumothorax, and may have a role in mitigating the rate of missed cases.Stian MohrsenNiall McMahonAlasdair CorfieldSinéad McKeeBMCarticleEmergency medical servicesCritical careThoracic injuriesPneumothoraxThoracostomyIntraoperative complicationsMedical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aidRC86-88.9ENScandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine, Vol 29, Iss 1, Pp 1-7 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Emergency medical services
Critical care
Thoracic injuries
Pneumothorax
Thoracostomy
Intraoperative complications
Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid
RC86-88.9
spellingShingle Emergency medical services
Critical care
Thoracic injuries
Pneumothorax
Thoracostomy
Intraoperative complications
Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid
RC86-88.9
Stian Mohrsen
Niall McMahon
Alasdair Corfield
Sinéad McKee
Complications associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomies: a rapid review
description Abstract Background Open thoracostomies have become the standard of care in pre-hospital critical care in patients with chest injuries receiving positive pressure ventilation. The procedure has embedded itself as a rapid method to decompress air or fluid in the chest cavity since its original description in 1995, with a complication rate equal to or better than the out-of-hospital insertion of indwelling pleural catheters. A literature review was performed to explore potential negative implications of open thoracostomies and discuss its role in mechanically ventilated patients without clinical features of pneumothorax. Main findings A rapid review of key healthcare databases showed a significant rate of complications associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomies. Of 352 thoracostomies included in the final analysis, 10.6% (n = 38) led to complications of which most were related to operator error or infection (n = 26). Pneumothoraces were missed in 2.2% (n = 8) of all cases. Conclusion There is an appreciable complication rate associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomy. Based on a risk/benefit decision for individual patients, it may be appropriate to withhold intervention in the absence of clinical features, but consideration must be given to the environment where the patient will be monitored during care and transfer. Chest ultrasound can be an effective assessment adjunct to rule in pneumothorax, and may have a role in mitigating the rate of missed cases.
format article
author Stian Mohrsen
Niall McMahon
Alasdair Corfield
Sinéad McKee
author_facet Stian Mohrsen
Niall McMahon
Alasdair Corfield
Sinéad McKee
author_sort Stian Mohrsen
title Complications associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomies: a rapid review
title_short Complications associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomies: a rapid review
title_full Complications associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomies: a rapid review
title_fullStr Complications associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomies: a rapid review
title_full_unstemmed Complications associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomies: a rapid review
title_sort complications associated with pre-hospital open thoracostomies: a rapid review
publisher BMC
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/11561a6f21e44e72bcf3fe3016e0be28
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AT niallmcmahon complicationsassociatedwithprehospitalopenthoracostomiesarapidreview
AT alasdaircorfield complicationsassociatedwithprehospitalopenthoracostomiesarapidreview
AT sineadmckee complicationsassociatedwithprehospitalopenthoracostomiesarapidreview
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