1. • 65 years old Male, smoker came with left-
sided chest pain and increasing difficulty
breathing since 2 weeks. He reports having
fever and decreased appetite. He recalls being
treated for tuberculosis when he was a child.
He has a clear chest x-ray taken 15 years ago.
• On examination pallor present, trachea
shifted to the right, chest expansion
decreased on left side, dullness in the
mammary, infra axillary areas, absent breath
sounds in the same area.
3. Clinical Features
Symptoms
• Chest pain (pleurisy)
• Breathlessness
• Symptoms associated with the actual cause of
pleural effusion
– Pnemonia
– Renal disorder, Cardiac and liver disease
– TB
– Risk for thromboembolism
– Exposure to asbestos (occupation)
4. Signs
• Trachea shifted to opposite side
• Bulge ?
• Chest movements decreased
• Stony dullness
• Absent breath sounds. Above
effusion, crackles may be present.
• Decreased vocal resonance and fremitus on
same side
• Traubes space percussion and tidal percussion
6. Normal Physiology
• Normally pleural space contains a thin layer of
fluid.
• Fluid enters the pleural space from the capillaries
in the parietal pleural and is removed by the
lymphatics in the parietal pleura.
• Fluid can also enter the pleural space from the
interstitial spaces of the lung via the visceral
pleura or from the peritoneal cavity through the
diaphragm.
7. PATHOGENESIS
• Pleural fluid accumulates when
Formation increases
Absorption decreases
• Pleural effusion can be
Transudative
Exudative
8. • Transudative effusion occurs commonly due to
systemic factors which either increase the
hydrostatic pressure or decrease the plasma
oncotic pressure.
• Exudative effusion occurs due to local
pathology in the lung or the pleura.
13. Radiological examination
Types of Pleural Effusion on X-ray:
1. Free fluid in the pleural space
a. Lamellar effusion
b. Subpulmonary effusion
c. Fissural effusion
2. Loculated effusion
3. Massive pleural effusion
14. Free fluid
1. First appears in the posterior CP angle (100-
200ml fluid): Lateral film
2. Meniscus sign:
– Dense homogenous opacity
– Well defined concave upper edge
– Higher laterally than medially
– Obscures the diaphragmatic shadow
15. Atypical distribution of fluid
• Lamellar effusions:
– Shallow collections between lung surface and visceral
pleural
– Represent interstial pulmonary fluid
• When large they form subpulmonary effusion
– Contour of diaphragm altered, apex shifted
– Blunting of CP angles and tracking into fissures
– Left: distance between gastric bubble and lung base
– Postural shifts in fluid
16. Loculated effusion
1. No change by gravitational methods
2. ?Extrapleural opacity, ?Peripheral lung lesion
Fissural effusion:
1. Lenticular, round or oval shadow
2. “Thickened” fissure
3. ‘Pseudo’ or ‘ Vanishing’ tumors?
18. Massive Pleural effusion
1. White out lung(WOL) + Contralateral
Mediastinal shift
D/D:
1. Collapse (WOL + Ipsilateral Mediastinal Shift)
2. Consolidation (WOL + Central trachea)
19. Ultrasonography
• Detects even 5ml of fluid in excess on normal
• Differentiation of pleural thickening from
loculated pleural effusion
• Associated abnormalities
20. Pleural aspiration and Analysis
Transudative or Exudative?
LIGHT’S CRITERIA:
1. Pleural fluid protein/Serum Protein >0.5
2. Pleural fluid LDH/Serum LDH >0.6
3. Pleural fluid LDH > 2/3rd the upper limit of
serum LDH
23. MANAGEMENT OF PLEURAL EFFUSION
MEDICAL MANAGEMNT
Treatment of underlying cause
Therapeutic aspiration is necessary in order to
relieve dyspnoea
Precautions:
Removing more than 1L in one episode in inadvisable
Can result in re-expansion pulmonary oedema
Should never be aspirated to dryness before the exact
etiology is determined
24. THORACOCENTESIS
INDICATIONS
Diagnostic
therapeutic
POSITION
Sitting position, leaning forward over a support
SITE
Below the scapula, posteriorly through the seventh
intercostal space
25. PROCEDURE
Informed consent
Clean the are with povidine
iodine
Local anesthesia
Insert the needle and flexible
catheter over the needle
Aspirate pleural fluid
26. COMPLICATIONS
Iatrogenic pneumothorax
Infection
Dry tap or bloody tap
Re-expansion pulmonary oedema
Pain and respiratory distress
28. Effusion due to Heart Failure
• Most common cause of pleural effusion
• a diagnostic thoracentesis is done if:
– the effusions are not bilateral and comparable in size
– the patient is febrile
– the patient has pleuritic chest pain to verify that the effusion is
transudative
• Otherwise the patient's heart failure is treated
• If the effusion persists despite therapy, a diagnostic thoracentesis should
be done
• A pleural fluid N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP)
>1500 pg/mL is diagnostic of an effusion secondary to congestive heart
failure
29. Parapneumonic Effusions
• most common cause of exudative pleural effusion (bacterial
pneumonias, lung abscess, bronchiectasis)
• The presence of free pleural fluid can be demonstrated with a lateral
decubitus radiograph, CT of the chest, or ultrasound
• If the free fluid separates the lung from the chest wall by >10 mm, a
therapeutic thoracentesis should be performed
• A procedure more invasive than thoracentesis is needed if the
following factors are present:
– Loculated pleural fluid
– Pleural fluid pH <7.20
– Pleural fluid glucose <3.3 mmol/L (<60 mg/dL)
– Positive Gram stain or culture of the pleural fluid
– Presence of gross pus in the pleural space
30. Parapneumonic Effusion
• If the fluid recurs after the initial therapeutic thoracentesis and if
any of these characteristics are present - a repeat thoracentesis
• If the fluid cannot be completely removed with the therapeutic
thoracentesis,
– insert a chest tube and instill a fibrinolytic agent (e.g., tissue
plasminogen activator, 10 mg)
– perform a thoracoscopy with the breakdown of adhesions
– Decortication (if these measures are ineffective)
31. Malignant Pleural Effusions
• 2nd most common type of exudative pleural effusion (lung carcinoma,
breast carcinoma, & lymphoma)
• Diagnosis: cytology of the pleural fluid
• If cytology is negative, thoracoscopy is done if malignancy is suspected
• Pleural abrasion should be performed to effect a pleurodesis
• Pleural abrasion: a scourer is used to scrape off the surface of parietal
pleura
• An alternative to thoracoscopy : CT- or ultrasound-guided needle
biopsy of pleural thickening or nodules
• Patients with a malignant pleural effusion are treated symptomatically
• Dyspnea if present and is relieved with a therapeutic thoracentesis,
one of the following procedures should be considered:
– insertion of a small indwelling catheter or
– tube thoracostomy with the instillation of a sclerosing agent such as
doxycycline, 500 mg
32. Chylothorax
• Occurs when thoracic duct is disrupted and chyle
accumulates in the pleural space.
• Thoracentesis shows milky fluid, and biochemical
analysis reveals a triglyceride level that exceeds
1.2 mmol/L (110 mg/dL)
• Treatment: insertion of a chest tube plus the
administration of octreotide
• If these measures fail, a pleuroperitoneal shunt
should be placed
• An alternative treatment is ligation of the thoracic
duct
33. Hemothorax
• Diagnostic thoracentesis shows bloody pleural fluid,
• Hematocrit :if >1/2 of that in the peripheral blood, the
patient is considered to have a hemothorax
• Treatment: tube thoracostomy ( helps quantify
bleeding)
• If the bleeding emanates from a laceration of the
pleura, apposition of the two pleural surfaces is likely
to stop the bleeding.
• If the pleural hemorrhage exceeds 200 mL/h, perform
thoracoscopy or thoracotomy