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Pleural fluid

Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

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Page 1: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

Pleural fluid

Page 2: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot

lie flat without feeling more short of breath .

She has a history of HTN and osteoarthritis, and she has been taking NSAIDs with increasing frequency over the previous few months. On physical examination, she appears dyspneic at rest, her BP is 140/90 mm Hg, and

pulse is 90 bpm .

Her jugular venous pressure is elevated to the angle of the jaw. The left lung field is dull to percussion with decreased air entry basally. Crackles are heard in the right lung field and above the line of dullness on the left. Lower extremities have pitting edema to the knee.

Page 3: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

•The pleural cavity is a potential space lined by mesothelium of the visceral and parietal pleurae.

•The pleural cavity normally contains a small amount of fluid. This fluid is a plasma filtrate derived from capillaries of the parietal pleura.

•It is produced continuously at a rate dependent on capillary hydrostatic pressure, plasma oncotic pressure, and capillary permeability

•Pleural fluid is reabsorbed through the lymphatics and venules of the visceral pleura.

Page 4: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has
Page 5: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

•An accumulation of fluid, called an effusion, results from an imbalance of fluid production and reabsorption.

•Excessive amounts of such fluid can impair breathing by limiting the expansion of the lungs during ventilation.

Types of fluids

Four types of fluids can accumulate in the pleural space:1. Serous fluid (hydrothorax)2. Blood (haemothorax (3. Chyle = lymph (chylothorax)4. Pus (pyothorax or empyema(

Page 6: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

Diagnosis• Pleural effusion is usually diagnosed on the basis of medical history and physical exam, and confirmed by chest x-ray.

• Once accumulated fluid is more than 300 mlmore than 300 ml, there are usually detectable clinical signs in the patient, such as:

• Decreased movement of the chest on the affected side,

• Stony dullness to percussion over the fluid,

• Diminished breath sounds on the affected side,

• In large effusion there is tracheal deviation away from the effusion.

Page 7: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

Imaging

•A pleural effusion will show up as an area of whiteness on a standard posteroanterior X-ray.

•Chest radiographs acquired in the lateral decubitus position (with the patient lying on his side) are more sensitive and can pick up as little as 50 ml of fluid.

•At least 300 ml of fluid must be present before upright chest films can pick up signs of pleural effusion (e.g., blunted costophrenic angles)

Page 8: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has
Page 9: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

Massive left sided pleural effusion in a patient presenting with lung cancer.

Page 10: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

CT scan of chest showing loculated pleural effusion in left side. Some thickening of pleura is also noted.

Page 11: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

SPECIMEN COLLECTIONThoracentesis is indicated for any undiagnosed pleural effusion or for therapeutic purposes in patients with massive symptomatic effusions;•A needle is inserted through the back of the chest wall in the sixth, seventh, or eighth intercostal space on the midaxillary line, into the pleural space.•The fluid may then be evaluated for the following:1.Chemical composition including protein, lactate dehydrogenase LDH, albumin, amylase, pH, and glucose.2.Gram stain and culture to identify possible bacterial infections 3.Cell count and differential 4.Cytopathology to identify cancer cells, some infective organisms Other tests as suggested by the clinical situation – lipids, fungal culture, viral culture, specific immunoglobulins

Page 12: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

Contraindications of thoracocentesis

• An uncooperative patient or a coagulation disorder that can not be corrected are absolute contraindications• Relative contraindications include cases in which the site of insertion has known bullous disease (e.g. emphysema( and use of mechanical ventilation.

Page 13: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has
Page 14: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

Exudates are more often unilateral, associated with localized disorders that increase vascular permeability or interfere with lymphatic resorption

Page 15: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

GROSS EXAMINATION* Transudates are typically clear, pale yellow to straw-colored, and odorless, and do not clot. Approximately 15% of transudates are blood tinged.

*A bloody pleural effusion (hematocrit >1%) suggests trauma, malignancy, or pulmonary infarction. A pleural fluid hematocrit greater than 50% of the blood hematocrit is good evidence for a hemothorax

*Exudates may grossly resemble transudates, but most show variable degrees of cloudiness or turbidity, and they often clot if not heparinized.

*A feculent odor may be detected in anaerobic infections.

*Turbid, milky, and/or bloody specimens should be centrifuged and the supernatant examined. If the supernatant is clear, the turbidity is most likely due to cellular elements or debris. If the turbidity persists after centrifugation, a chylous effusion is likely.

Page 16: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

Pleural Fluid Analysis Pleural fluid laboratory findingsLights criteria (High protein and LDH = exudate), determines presence of exudate with protein and LDH levels

Pleural fluid protein to serum protein ratio >0.5Pleural fluid LDH to serum LDH ratio >0.6Pleural fluid level >2/3 of upper value for serum LDH

Additional criteria – Confirm exudate if results equivocalSerum albumin – pleural fluid albumin <1.2g/dL

If exudate is confirmed, further testing required to evaluate cause of exudateDifferential cell count (predominance of white cells)Neutrophils – PTE, pancreatitis, pneumonia, empyemaLymphocytes – Cancer, TB pleuritisEosinophila – Pneumothorax, haemothorax, asbestosisMononuclear cells – Chronic inflammatory process

Page 17: Pleural fluid. Case study A 70-year-old women presents with slowly increasing dyspnea. She cannot lie flat without feeling more short of breath. She has

Gram stain and culture and cytologyblood culture bottles and specimen jars – especially if chronic illness or suspect TB or fungusCytology useful in cases of suspected malignancyGlucoseLowCommon: Infection (pneumonia) and malignancy

Rare: TB, haemothorax ,LDH level – This is classically high in exudatesRepeated testing confirms continuation or cessation of processIncreasing LDH (ongoing inflammation)Decreasing LDH (cessation of process)Pleural fluid pH (Low glucose and pH = infection or malignancy)Taken if suspect pneumonic or malignant process (Low glucose)

<7.20 with pneumonia…Drain the fluid<7.20 with malignancy …Life expectancy 30 days

AmylaseUseful if suspect pancreatitis as cause