Session 2 CM pulm12 Word Scramble
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Question | Answer |
What is the definition of pneumothorax | free air in the chest outside of the lung |
what can happen if the visceral pleura is perforated or the chest wall and parietal pluera are perforated | air enters plueral space, negative pressure is lost and lung on affected side collapses = pneumothorax |
What are the 4 classifications of pneumothorax | spnontaneous traumatic iatrogenic tension** |
Which type of pneumothorax occurs w/o injury air enters pleural cavity via the airway and can be further divided between primary and secondary | spontaneous pneumothorax |
pneumothorax in pt w/ no known lung disease caused by rupture of a bulla in the lung most often in tall thin men between 20 and 40 yrs old often occurs during exercise | spontaneous primary pneumothorax |
pnuemothorax in patient w/ known lung disease most often COPD but could be TB, Pneumonia, Asthma, cystic fibrosis, lung cancer. Often severe and life threatening | spontaneous secondary pneumothorax |
pneumothorax often caused by an injury to the chest wall further classified as open or closed | traumatic pneumothorax |
What is an open traumatic pneumothorax | air enters pleural cavitity from the outside w/ free communication between exterior and pleural space through an open wound (blowing wound, sucking wound) May be caused by stab, gunshot or impaled object |
traumatic pneumothorax w/ air enters the pleural cavity via lungs caused by blunt chest trauma (crushing injury often car crash, fall or crushing chest injury | Closed Pneumothorax- not as apparent as open pneumothorax |
What pneumothorax is caused by procedure or treatment often gone bad | iatrogenic pneumothorax |
Type of pneumothorax where air accumulates in the pleural space w/ each breath. increase in intrathoracic pressure shifts mediastinum away from affected lung, compress intrathoracic vessels, can lead to cardiovascular collapse | tensino pneumothorax |
pneumothorax that can be caused by a piece of tissue forms a one-way valve that allows air to enter the pleural cavity but not to escape, overpressure can build up with every breath | tension pneumothorax |
the following are common causes of what type of pneumothorax * insertion of a central line * thoracic surgery * thoracentesis * pleural or transbronchial biopsy. | iatrogenic pneumothorax |
if a scuba diver ascends to quickly what type of pneumothorax are they likely to develop | traumatic closed pneumothorax |
What are the clinical manifestations of pneumothorax | sudden sharp chest pain asymmetrical chest expansion dyspnea cyanosis hyper resonance or tympany breath sounds diminished or absent respiratory distress O2 sat decreased tachypnea tachycardia restlessness/anxiety |
What are the s/s of open pneumothorax | crepitus, sub q empphysema, sucking chest wound |
what are the s/s of a tension pneumothorax | decreased CO hypotension tachycardia tachypnea mediastinal shift and tracheal deviation to unaffected side cardiac arrest distended neck veins |
what will you likely see on ABG's in pneumothorax | intial PaCO2 decreased respiratory alkalosis later= hypoxemia, hypercapnia, acidosis |
what is the treatment for open pneumothorax | cover immediately with occlusive dressing made air tight with petroleum jelly or clean plastic sheeting |
what is the tx for small pneumothorax | spontaneous recover- bed rest, generally resolves in 1 to 2 weeks or remove air with small bore needle inserted into pleural space |
What is the tx for a larger pneumothorax | chest tube surgery repair pleurodesis (glue, very painful, prep with analgesic), O2, |
What are the complications from recurrent pneumothorax and what should patient stop doing | cardiac damage d/c smoking, high altitudes, scuba diving, flying in unpressurized aircraft |
Created by:
smaxsmith
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