Anatomy clinical correlates: Pleura and lungs

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Anatomy clinical correlates: Pleura and lungs

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Anatomy clinical correlates: Anterior and posterior abdominal wall
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Anatomy clinical correlates: Female pelvis and perineum
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Extrinsic hemolytic normocytic anemia: Pathology review
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Anatomy clinical correlates: Heart
Anatomy clinical correlates: Mediastinum
Anatomy clinical correlates: Pleura and lungs
Anatomy clinical correlates: Thoracic wall
Aortic dissections and aneurysms: Pathology review
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Deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism: Pathology review
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Gastrointestinal system anatomy and physiology
Enteric nervous system
Colorectal polyps and cancer: Pathology review
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Anatomy clinical correlates: Pleura and lungs
Anatomy clinical correlates: Thoracic wall
GERD, peptic ulcers, gastritis, and stomach cancer: Pathology review
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Anatomy of the abdominal viscera: Large intestine
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Anatomy clinical correlates: Anterior blood supply to the brain
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Anatomy clinical correlates: Arm, elbow and forearm
Anatomy clinical correlates: Axilla
Anatomy clinical correlates: Bones, fascia and muscles of the neck
Anatomy clinical correlates: Bones, joints and muscles of the back
Anatomy clinical correlates: Clavicle and shoulder
Anatomy clinical correlates: Foot
Anatomy clinical correlates: Hip, gluteal region and thigh
Anatomy clinical correlates: Knee
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Anatomy clinical correlates: Median, ulnar and radial nerves
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Seronegative and septic arthritis: Pathology review
Apnea, hypoventilation and pulmonary hypertension: Pathology review
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Heart failure: Pathology review
Nephrotic syndromes: Pathology review
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Anatomy clinical correlates: Anterior and posterior abdominal wall
Anatomy clinical correlates: Bones, joints and muscles of the back
Anatomy clinical correlates: Vertebral canal
Aortic dissections and aneurysms: Pathology review
Back pain: Pathology review
Anatomy clinical correlates: Inguinal region
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Prostate disorders and cancer: Pathology review
Testicular and scrotal conditions: Pathology review
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Complications during pregnancy: Pathology review
Anatomy clinical correlates: Eye
Eye conditions: Inflammation, infections and trauma: Pathology review
Eye conditions: Refractive errors, lens disorders and glaucoma: Pathology review
Eye conditions: Retinal disorders: Pathology review
Anatomy clinical correlates: Pleura and lungs
Coronary artery disease: Pathology review
Obstructive lung diseases: Pathology review
Pleural effusion, pneumothorax, hemothorax and atelectasis: Pathology review
Bronchodilators: Beta 2-agonists and muscarinic antagonists
Bronchodilators: Leukotriene antagonists and methylxanthines
Pulmonary corticosteroids and mast cell inhibitors
Anatomy clinical correlates: Ear
Anatomy clinical correlates: Temporal regions, oral cavity and nose
Nasal, oral and pharyngeal diseases: Pathology review
Sexually transmitted infections: Vaginitis and cervicitis: Pathology review
Vaginal and vulvar disorders: Pathology review

Transcript

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Before you start watching this video, relax, and take a deep breath.

Think about the air filling up your lungs, which are located on either side of your thoracic cavity.

Now, we often take breathing for granted because it is under autonomic control, and it’s not until we have trouble breathing when we realize just how important our lungs are.

There are many conditions that can affect the lungs, which can have a huge impact on our day to day lives.

Now let’s look at some causes for lung ailments, starting with injuries of the cervical pleura and lung apex.

Both these structures project through the superior thoracic aperture into the neck.

So when there’s an injury involving the base of the neck, the lungs and pleural sacs can be injured as well, which can cause a pneumothorax.

The pleura is also exposed to potential injury in its inferior portion, because it descends below the costal margin in three regions, where a penetrating injury may enter into the pleural sac.

The first is the right part of the infrasternal angle, the other two parts are the right and left posterior costovertebral angles which are inferomedial to the 12th ribs and posterior to the superior poles of the kidneys.

So kidney surgery can pose a risk for pleural injury.

When discussing injuries to the pleura and lungs, it’s important to understand what pleuritic chest pain means.

Pleuritic chest pain is caused by irritation to the pleura, which results in a classical ‘sharp’, stabbing pain that gets worse when you breathe in, and is exacerbated even further by deep inhalation and exhalation.

Pleuritic chest pain can have multiple causes, including a pneumothorax, which is when there’s air trapped within the pleural cavity, or a pleural effusion, when fluid builds up in the pleural cavity.

Inflammation of the pleura can cause pleuritic chest pain, which is often the result of infection or inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, and may even result in an empyema where infected fluid builds up in the pleural cavity.

Pulmonary emboli can also result in irritation of the pleura, resulting in pleuritic chest pain.

Pleuritic chest pain is mostly experienced at the site of pleural irritation, however we can also have a phenomenon we call referred pain.

Portions of the parietal lung pleura are innervated by branches of the intercostal nerves peripherally and the phrenic nerves centrally where the parietal pleura covers the diaphragm.

So for example, if there’s irritation of the parietal pleura caused by something like an infection or effusion overlying the mediastinal and central areas of the diaphragm, then we get referred pain to the dermatomal areas supplied by the same spinal levels.

So in this case, the central diaphragm is innervated by the phrenic nerve which is supplied by spinal levels C3, C4 and C5, so the dermatomes of the same spinal levels C3, C4 and C5, which innervate the root of the neck and shoulder, could result in referred pain to the neck or shoulder.

Now let’s look at a procedure called a thoracentesis, also known as a thoracocentesis, which when a hypodermic needle is inserted through an intercostal space and into the pleural cavity to remove pleural fluid, blood or pus from the pleural space.

With a thoracentesis, the needle can be inserted between the 6th and 8th rib on the midclavicular line, between the 8th and 10th rib along the midaxillary line, or between the 10th and 12th rib along the paravertebral line.

Always remember to insert the needle above the superior border of the rib in order to avoid damage to the intercostal nerves and vessels, which run along the inferior portion of each rib.

For example, if doing a thoracentesis at the midaxillary line between rib 8 and 9, you would insert the needle along the superior border of 9th rib as your guide.

To enter the pleural cavity, the needle passes through skin, then the intercostal muscles, and finally the costal parietal pleura.

If the individual sits in an upright position, the intrapleural fluid accumulates in the costodiaphragmatic recess due to gravity.

In this case, the needle should be inserted into the 8th or 9th intercostal space in the midaxillary line during expiration, which will help avoid injuring the inferior border of the lung.

Additionally, the needle should be oriented upward in order to avoid penetrating the deep side of the recess, which is a thin layer of diaphragmatic parietal pleura and diaphragm overlying the liver.

Of note, caution should be taken as any thoracentesis done below the 9th rib has a risk of injury to abdominal structures, like the liver if doing a thoracentesis on the right lung.

Okay, now just a few words on pneumothorax.

Air can accumulate in the pleural cavity because of a penetrating wound of the parietal pleura, such as a bullet or knife wound.

The lungs are particularly vulnerable at the apices as the cervical pleura extends above the first rib and clavicle.

However, a pneumothorax can also occur spontaneously, in which case it’s termed a spontaneous pneumothorax.

No matter the cause, when there’s air in the pleural cavity, this can present with varying degrees of severity depending on the extent of the pneumothorax.

Symptoms of a pneumothorax include shortness of breath and sudden unilateral pleuritic chest pain.

On clinical examination, the chest wall on the affected side might appear bigger than the normal side.

On palpation, chest expansion is uneven due to decreased chest wall movement of the affected side and tactile fremitus is decreased on the affected side.

On percussion, the extra air in the pleural space causes hyperresonance on the affected side, and breath sounds are diminished on the affected side.

On a chest x-ray, there’s a retracted visceral pleural edge, which is seen as a thin, sharp white line, alongside a decreased lung volume due to the lung collapsing.

The space beyond the visceral line is mostly black, because the space where the lung should be is filled with air.

When there’s only a small amount of air in the pleural space, the individual is usually hemodynamically stable, and can be treated conservatively.

However a larger pneumothorax can result in significant collapse of the corresponding lung and requires advanced treatment.

A pneumothorax can also escalate into what is known as a tension pneumothorax, where air continues to enter the pleural space and is unable to leave.

This is because with a tension pneumothorax, there’s a flap of tissue close to the area of air entry that creates a one-way valve for air to flow in the pleural space, but does not allow air out..

A tension pneumothorax typically has a more severe clinical presentation.

See, that’s because air can’t get out, so it rapidly accumulates in the pleural cavity, compressing the other organs in the mediastinum, including the heart, leading to increased thoracic pressure, which causes lower systemic venous return to the heart and a decreased cardiac output.

Other clinical signs include increased heart rate and breathing rate, d distended neck veins and distant muffled heart sounds.

With a tension pneumothorax, there may also be a mediastinal shift on a chest x-ray, which is seen as a tracheal deviation and displacement of chest structures away from the affected side.

However, a tension pneumothorax should be recognized clinically and treated immediately to achieve decompression, since it can cause rapid deterioration of the viral signs.

So, typically the quickest way to allow for air evacuation is needle thoracostomy which is often done in the second intercostal space on the affected side, at the midclavicular line, which decompresses the chest and provides an escape route for the trapped air.

Since anatomy always comes in handy, you can identify the second costal cartilage by using the sternal angle.

Once you locate the sternal angle, the intercostal space below it is the second intercostal space, which you can follow by palpation to the midclavicular line for needle insertion.

Alternatively, you can also use the 4th or 5th intercostal space at the midaxillary line for decompression.

Following needle decompression, a thoracostomy tube is typically placed

Speaking of which, chest tubes can be used for a variety of other reasons as well.

Right off the bat, a chest tube is a good idea when air, blood, fluid, pus or a combination of these accumulates in the pleural cavity.

In this case, the chest tube is inserted in either the 4th or 5th intercostal space at the anterior axillary or mid axillary line, and then guided through the skin, subcutaneous tissue, serratus anterior, intercostal muscles, and parietal pleura.

In order to safely do this and prevent injury to surrounding structures, we use the triangle of safety, which is formed anteriorly by the lateral border of the pectoralis major muscle, posteriorly by the lateral border of the latissimus dorsi muscle and inferiorly by a horizontal line from the nipple or 5th intercostal space.

Sources

  1. "Ferri's Clinical Advisor 2017 E-Book" Elsevier Health Sciences (2016)
  2. "Disease & Drug Consult: Respiratory Disorders" Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (2012)
  3. "Textbook of Pleural Diseases Second Edition" CRC Press (2008)
  4. "Pneumothorax Following Thoracentesis" Archives of Internal Medicine (2010)
  5. "Therapeutic thoracentesis: the role of ultrasound and pleural manometry" Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine (2007)
  6. "Improving the safety of thoracentesis" Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine (2011)
  7. "Spontaneous pneumothorax" BMJ (2014)
  8. "Pleurisy" Am Fam Physician. (2007)
  9. "Needle thoracentesis decompression: observations from postmortem computed tomography and autopsy" Spec Oper Med (2013)