Negative Pressure Wound Therapy as a Treatment Option for Extensive Post-Trauma Subcutaneous Emphysema

Acta Chir Orthop Traumatol Cech. 2021;88(6):464-467.ABSTRACTSubcutaneous emphysema can be a secondary complication of chest trauma or one of the complications of ruptured bullae in advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Massive subcutaneous emphysema impairs the respiratory mechanics and affects the venous returns of the head and neck. It can lead to respiratory insufficiency with the need for mechanical ventilation. The treatment should focus on the primary pathology. Nonetheless, in patients with subcutaneous emphysema as the only but serious symptom, the treatment can zero in solely on this complication. The standard procedure consists in the insertion of chest drain which does not necessarily have to lead to successful treatment results. The authors present a case study of a 77-year-old man with major comorbidities, with extensive subcutaneous emphysema after blunt chest wall trauma, in which respiratory insufficiency developed. The chest drain was ineffective. The solution was to apply subfascial negative pressure therapy infraclavicularly to the area of the pectoral muscle, which made the subcutaneous emphysema almost immediately subside and which substantially improved the clinical condition of the patient. Local negative pressure therapy can be used as the method of choice for treating massive subcutaneous emphysema in patients, in whom the standardised treatment by chest drain with active suction mechanism failed and the lung is expanded in the pleural cavit...
Source: Acta Chirurgiae Orthopaedicae et Traumatologiae Cechoslovaca - Category: Orthopaedics Authors: Source Type: research