Vacuum-assisted closure therapy as adjunct to treatment of grotesque subcutaneous emphysema after blunt chest trauma: A case report

Authors

  • Sebastian Lieb
  • Mark Rudin
  • Christoph Meier

Keywords:

Chest trauma, Pneumomediastinum, Pneumothorax, Subcutaneous emphysema, Vacuum-assisted closure - therapy

Abstract

Subcutaneous emphysema (SE) is a potentially life-threatening complication derived from a pneumothorax. Treatment can be challenging and on an emergency basis. A 79-year-old patient was admitted with blunt chest trauma after a motor vehicle accident. Computed tomography showed incarceration of lung parenchyma in a fractured rib without pneumothorax. The patient was initially stable, but later on developed several episodes of acute dyspnea with bilateral pneumothoraces and life-threatening SE. Further assessment using chest X-ray was complicated by SE. Treatment consisted of chest tube insertion and additional vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) therapy of the SE using a pectoral incision. Symptoms resolved quickly, and chest tube and VAC-therapy could be discontinued by day 7 and 3, respectively. Immediate chest tube insertion is the first-line treatment for trauma patients with massive SE, even if a pneumothorax may not reliably be diagnosed initially. Supportive VAC-therapy must be considered to accelerate the decline of massive SE.

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Published

2018-06-25

Issue

Section

Case Report

How to Cite

Vacuum-assisted closure therapy as adjunct to treatment of grotesque subcutaneous emphysema after blunt chest trauma: A case report. (2018). Indian Journal of Case Reports, 4(3), 188-190. https://mansapublishers.com/index.php/ijcr/article/view/899

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