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ISSN: 1731-5530
Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska/Polish Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
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1/2015
vol. 12
 
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CASE REPORTS
Penetrating thoracic injuries – treatment of two patients after suicide attempts

Krzysztof Greberski
,
Paweł Bugajski
,
Stanisław Rzymski
,
Radosław Jarząbek
,
Bogumił Olczak
,
Ryszard Kalawski

Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska 2015; 12 (1): 62-64
Online publish date: 2015/03/31
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- 13_Greberski.pdf  [0.36 MB]
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Introduction

Thoracic injuries are most commonly caused by penetrating trauma (stab or gunshot wounds) [1] or blunt trauma (traffic accidents, falls from heights) [2, 3]. The primary method of treatment in such cases is surgery preceded by diagnostic examinations [4]. This paper presents two cases of penetrating chest wounds treated at the Cardiac Surgery Department, Trauma Surgery Department, and Intensive Care Unit of the Józef Struś Multidisciplinary Hospital in Poznań. The patients were two young men, aged 29 and 36, who were admitted to the Trauma Center in 2013 after suicide attempts. The strategy for managing these life-threatening situations, designed by a multidisciplinary team of consultants, enabled the choice of optimal treatment and diagnostic methods for both patients.

Case 1

The 29-year-old patient had been undergoing psychiatric treatment for several years; his mental condition deteriorated, as evidenced by increasing aggression and significant psychomotor agitation. The patient’s housemate decided that it was necessary to call the police and emergency services. During the ensuing negotiations with police officers, the patient stabbed himself in the chest above the sternum with a knife. He was admitted to the Emergency Department with a penetrating chest wound located at the level of the jugular notch (Fig. 1). At the time of admission, the patient was conscious and did not suffer from circulatory or respiratory failure (blood pressure 130/80, heart rate 90 bpm); his speech was coherent, but he had trouble swallowing. Imaging diagnostic procedures were started immediately, including a chest X-ray examination (Fig. 2) and computed tomography of the chest and neck. Initial evaluation revealed left-sided pneumothorax and injury of the left thyroid gland lobe; the blade of the knife extended from the jugular notch to the left transverse process of the Th5 vertebra without passing through important structures. Therefore, the patient was transferred to the operating theater, where, under general anesthesia and under the supervision of a cardiac surgery consultant, suction drainage was introduced to the left pleural cavity, and the knife was removed from the puncture site. As there was no significant bleeding or air leakage, the wound was cleaned and closed with surgical sutures (Ethilon 4/0). After the procedure, the patient was transferred to the intensive care unit (ICU), where analgosedation and mechanical ventilation were continued. During the 1st day after the intervention, the patient was in a stable circulatory and respiratory condition with periodic drops of saturation to 90%. In the afternoon, the drainage of red fluid from the left pleural cavity increased. Due to increasing symptoms of respiratory failure, a decision was made to employ mechanical ventilation and sedation. Computed tomography of the chest visualized a massive hematoma in the left pleural cavity; no contrast extravasation was observed; the distal segment of the drain had no contact with the hematoma. Furthermore, the examination revealed slight right-sided pneumothorax with fluid accumulation; the left lung was compressed by the hematoma, and edema was visualized on the left thyroid gland lobe. In light of these findings, a trauma surgeon was consulted; the surgeon decided to introduce another drain into the left pleural cavity, but found no indications for thoracotomy. On the next day, chest X-ray examination demonstrated that the amount of fluid in the left pleural cavity was reduced, the left lung was aerated, and the drains were properly located. Over the subsequent postoperative days, the patient’s clinical condition stabilized, and he was extubated on the 8th day. On the 10th day after the removal of the pleural drains, the patient was transferred to the Regional Hospital for Nervous and Mental Diseases in Gniezno in a stable circulatory and respiratory condition.

Case 2

The 36-year-old patient without previous psychiatric history stabbed himself with a knife in the left side of the precordial area during an argument with his fiancée. The patient came to the hospital on his own; during admission, he claimed that the wound was superficial because it occurred while performing everyday kitchen chores. During his stay at the Emergency Department, cardiac surgical consultation and imaging examinations were recommended. During the consultation, the hemodynamic condition of the patient deteriorated. In view of the worsening clinical condition, the patient admitted that the wound was self-inflicted and potentially deep. Chest X-ray examination revealed an increase in the width of the mediastinal shadow on the left side; the urgently performed computed tomography of the chest revealed signs of bleeding into the mediastinum as well as atelectatic changes in the dorsal region of the left lung. Injury of the left brachiocephalic vein was also suspected. The patient was urgently transferred to the operating theater of the Cardiac Surgery Department.

Description of the procedure

After median sternotomy was performed, a massive mediastinal hematoma was visualized. Dissection of the pericardial sac revealed a large amount of fluid blood and isolated thrombi causing cardiac tamponade (Fig. 3). An incised wound, 2 cm in length, was observed on the anterior surface of the pulmonary trunk; it was immediately repaired with continuous Prolene 4-0 sutures. Evaluation of the pleural cavity demonstrated no lung damage or bleeding; however, injury of the interior chest wall and rupture of the left internal thoracic artery were observed. The massively bleeding stumps of the vessel were closed with metal clips. Active drainage of the mediastinum and pleural cavities was employed. The patient was transferred to the ICU in a relatively severe general condition (no coherent speech, mechanical ventilation, intravenous catecholamine infusion). For 4 days after the procedure, the patient required intensive medical care, catecholamine support, mechanical ventilation, and blood product transfusion. During the patient’s stay at the ICU, his condition stabilized gradually, and he was extubated on the 5th postoperative day. During subsequent days, the patient remained in a stable hemodynamic and respiratory condition. Suction drainage was removed on the 7th postoperative day. Thanks to intensive rehabilitation, the conscious patient was transferred to the Trauma Surgery Department on the 10th postoperative day in a stable circulatory condition in order to undergo further treatment.

Conclusions

The presented cases of young men with penetrating chest wounds confirm that all patients with thoracic injuries require intensive and individualized diagnostics and therapy. The applied multi-specialist approach resulted in successful outcomes. In the first case, the circumstances of the injury (visible handle of the knife which was almost completely sunk into the patient’s chest) initially suggested that extensive surgical intervention would be required. However, the use of imaging diagnostics enabled the exclusion of serious injuries within the chest; the treatment could, therefore, be limited to removing the knife in the operating theater. In the case of the second patient, the small size of the penetrating chest wound did not reflect the extent of the damage caused by the blade. Computed tomography revealed serious injuries within the chest, which were promptly treated with cardiac surgery. Thoracic injuries should always be approached with the utmost caution, and advanced diagnostics should be employed as soon as possible in order to confirm or exclude damage to vital organs.

Disclosure

Authors report no conflict of interest.

References

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Copyright: © 2015 Polish Society of Cardiothoracic Surgeons (Polskie Towarzystwo KardioTorakochirurgów) and the editors of the Polish Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
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