What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?

  • PDFView PDF

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?

Under a Creative Commons license

Open access

Abstract

Breathing is automatic. We don’t usually think too much about it unless we develop a problem. Lack of adequate ventilation and impairment of our respiratory system can quickly become life-threatening. There are many clinical conditions that may necessitate the use of chest tubes. When there is an accumulation of positive pressure in the chest cavity (where it should normally be negative pressure between pleurae), a patient will require chest drainage. Chest tubes may be inserted to drain body fluids or to facilitate the re-expansion of a lung. It is important for the clinician to determine the most appropriate tube size to use prior to intubation. The position of the chest tube is related to the function that the chest tube performs. When managing the care of patients who have chest tubes it is important to fully understand what to do in case problems arise. It is also important to be able to assess when the chest tube is ready to be discontinued. Nurses and other healthcare professionals who are responsible for the safe delivery of care should be knowledgeable about respiratory pathophysiology, signs of respiratory compromise, and the care and management of interventions that may be utilized to ensure adequate respiration.

Abbreviation

Keywords

Chest tube

Chest drainage unit

Parietal pleurae

Visceral pleurae

Cited by (0)

Copyright © 2015 The Author. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V.

Obtain informed consent from the patient or patient’s representative except when urgent placement is required.

Assemble the drainage system and connect it to the suction source. The appearance of bubbles in the water chamber is a sign that the chest tube drainage device is functioning properly.

Position the patient as described above.

Identify the patient using two identifiers (eg, name and date of birth). If possible, match the patient's identifiers at his or her bed side with the identifiers present on a chest radiographs or computerized tomograms (CT) that was recently performed. Clearly mark the site of chest tube insertion (right or left).

Identify the fifth intercostal and the midaxillary line. The skin incision is made in between the midaxillary and anterior axillary lines over a rib that is below the intercostal level selected for chest tube insertion. A surgical marker can be used to better delineate the anatomy.

Shave excessive hair and apply a preparatory solution to a wide area of the chest wall as shown below.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Skin preparation and marking.

Wear sterile gloves, gown, hair cover, and goggles or face shield, and apply sterile drapes to the area.

Administer analgesia. Administer a systemic analgesic (unless contraindicated). Use the 25-ga needle to inject 5 mL of the local anesthetic solution into the skin overlying the initial skin incision, as shown in the image below. Use the longer needle (23 or, preferably, 27 ga) to infiltrate about 5 mL of the anesthetic solution to a wide area of subcutaneous tissue superior to the expected initial incision. Redirect the needle to the expected course of the chest tube (following the upper border of the rib below the fifth intercostal space), and inject approximately 10 mL of the anesthetic solution into the periosteum (if bone is encountered), intercostal muscle, and the pleura. Aspiration of air, blood, pus, or a combination thereof into the syringe confirms that the needle entered the pleural cavity.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Local anesthesia.

Use the No. 11 or 10 blade to make a skin incision approximately 4 cm long overlying the rib that is below the desired intercostal level of entry. The skin incision should be in the same direction as the rib itself.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Skin incision.

Use a hemostat or a medium Kelly clamp to bluntly dissect a tract in the subcutaneous tissue by intermittently advancing the closed instrument and opening it, as shown.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Blunt dissection down to the intercostal muscle.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Further blunt dissection down to the intercostal muscle.

Palpate the tract with a finger as shown, and make sure that the tract ends at the upper border of the rib above the skin incision. Insertion of the chest tube as close as possible to the upper border of the rib will minimize the risks of injury to the nerve and blood vessels that follow the lower border of each rib.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Palpation of the selected intercostal space and the superior margin of its inferior rib.

Adding more local anesthetic to the intercostal muscles and pleura at this time is recommended.

Use a closed large Kelly clamp to pass through the intercostal muscles and parietal pleura and enter into the pleural space, as shown.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
A closed and locked Kelly clamp is used to enter the chest wall into the pleural cavity. Make sure to guide the clamp over the upper margin of the rib.

This maneuver requires some force and twisting motion of the tip of the closed Kelly clamp. This motion should be done in a controlled manner so the instrument does not enter too far into the chest, which could injure the lung or diaphragm. Upon entry into the pleural space, a rush of air or fluid should occur.

The Kelly clamp should be opened (while still inside the pleural space) and then withdrawn so that its jaws enlarge the dissected tract through all layers of the chest wall as shown. This facilitates passage of the chest tube when it is inserted.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Once the Kelly clamp enters the pleural cavity, the clamp should be opened to further enlarge the opening.

Use a sterile, gloved finger to appreciate the size of the tract and to feel for lung tissue and possible adhesions, as shown in the image below. Rotate the finger 360º to appreciate the presence of dense adhesions that cannot be broken and require placement of the chest tube in a different site, preferably under fluoroscopy (ie, by interventional radiology).

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
A finger is used to palpate the tract and feel for adhesions before insertion of the chest tube.

Measure the length between the skin incision and the apex of the lung to estimate how far the chest tube should be inserted. If desired, place a clamp over the tube to mark the estimated length. Some prefer to clamp the tube at a distal point, memorizing the estimated length.

Grasp the proximal (fenestrated) end of the chest tube with the large Kelly clamp and introduce it through the tract and into the thoracic cavity as shown.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
The proximal end of the chest tube is held with a Kelly clamp that is used to guide the chest tube through the tract. The distal end of the chest tube should always be clamped until it is connected to the drainage device.

Release the Kelly clamp and continue to advance the chest tube posteriorly and superiorly. Make sure that all of the fenestrated holes in the chest tube are inside the thoracic cavity.

Connect the chest tube to the drainage device as shown (some prefer to cut the distal end of the chest tube to facilitate its connection to the drainage device tubing). Release the cross clamp that is on the chest tube only after the chest tube is connected to the drainage device.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Connection of the chest tube to a drainage system.

Before securing the tube with stitches, look for a respiration-related swing in the fluid level of the water seal device to confirm correct intrathoracic placement.

Secure the chest tube to the skin using 0 or 1-0 silk or nylon stitches, as depicted below.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
A 0 or 1-0 silk or nylon suture is used to secure the chest tube to the skin.

For securing sutures, two separate through-and-through, simple, interrupted stitches on each side of the chest tube are recommended. This technique ensures tight closure of the skin incision and prevents routine patient movements from dislodging the chest tube. Each stitch should be tightly tied to the skin, then wrapped tightly around the chest tube several times to cause slight indentation, and then tied again. Sealing suture: A central vertical mattress stitch with ends left long and knotted together can be placed to allow for sealing of the tract once the chest tube is removed.

Place petrolatum (eg, Vaseline) gauze over the skin incision as shown.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Apply petrolatum (eg, Vaseline) gauze over the skin incision.

Create an occlusive dressing to place over the chest tube by turning regular gauze squares (4 x 4 in) into Y-shaped fenestrated gauze squares and using 4-in adhesive tape to secure them to the chest wall, as shown below. Make sure to provide enough padding between the chest tube and the chest wall.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Preparation of a Y-shaped fenestrated drain gauze from regular gauze (4 x 4 in).

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Apply support gauze dressing around the chest tube and secure it to the chest wall with 4-in adhesive tape.

Strap the emerging chest tube on to the lower trunk with a "mesentry" fold of adhesive tape, as this avoids kinking of the tube as it passes through the chest wall. It also helps reduce wound site pain and discomfort for the patient. All connections are then taped in their long axis to avoid disconnections.

Obtain a chest radiograph, like the one below, to ensure correct placement of the chest tube.

What are some possible complications that a patient with a chest tube may experience?
Chest tube in good position.

See Tube Thoracostomy Management for removal techniques.

Which complication may occur if the chest tube is clamped?

Non-functioning tube The chest tube should not be clamped because doing so in a patient who has active air leak can result in tension pneumothorax.

What causes severe pain after chest tube placement?

Technical causes include tube malposition, blocked drain, chest drain dislodgement, reexpansion pulmonary edema, subcutaneous emphysema, nerve injuries, cardiac and vascular injuries, oesophageal injuries, residual/postextubation pneumothorax, fistulae, tumor recurrence at insertion site, herniation through the site of ...

What are 5 potential diagnosis for the use of a chest tube?

Reasons for a chest tube insertion a lung infection like bacterial pneumonia complicated by collection of pus. pneumothorax, which is air around or outside the lung. bleeding around your lung, especially after a trauma (like a car accident) fluid buildup due to another medical condition, like cancer or pneumonia.

What are the complications of a pneumothorax?

The complications of pneumothorax include effusion, hemorrhage, empyema; respiratory failure, pneumomediastinum, arrhythmias and instable hemodynamics need to be handled accordingly. Treatment complications refer to major pain, subcutaneous emphysema, bleeding and infection, rare re-expansion pulmonary edema.