Pneumothorax (ultrasound)

Changed by David Carroll, 25 Jan 2019

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Pneumothorax is a serious potential consequence of blunt thoracic trauma and, if misdiagnosed, it may quickly become life-threatening.

For a discussion on epidemiology, clinical presentation, pathology, and treatment and prognosis please see the main pneumothorax article. 

Radiographic features

CT is considered the gold-standard in the diagnosis of pneumothorax. Thoracic ultrasound has more sensitivity than a supine chest radiograph (see: supine pneumothorax) for the identification of pneumothorax after blunt trauma. The other advantage of ultrasound is that it can be used at point-of-care. 

The normal lung interface with pleura shows lung sliding with vertical comet tails running down from the pleural surface. In pneumothorax, this sliding is absent and so are the comet tail artifacts from the pleura, the sight of even a single B-line ruling out a pneumothorax at that location. ThisThere is duealso loss of the lung pulse, the subtle lung oscillation in tandem with cardiac contraction, which is especially important when trying to gas indistinguish between right mainstem intubation (loss of sliding on the parietalleft, but lung pulse is present) and a left sided pneumothorax (no sliding or lung pulse). Free intrathoracic air will then reflect incident ultrasound waves, obscuring the visceral pleura, preventing beneath; as all signs in lung ultrasonography fundamentally originate from slidingthe pleura, they are too abolished.

VisualisingVisualizing the junction between sliding lung and absent sliding is known as the lung point sign and is near 100% specific for pneumothorax and also gives an indication. One may use the mid-axillary line as a landmark for subsequent semi-quantification of the pneumothorax size by itsvolume. location. It is not able to be found in all pneumothorax cases (sensitivity is around 65%) especially large pneumothoraces where the lung is collapsed and there is globally absent sliding. 

On M mode, classical signs for the gray scale imaging are seen:

  • seashore sign: normal lung sliding
  • barcode/stratosphere sign: pneumothorax 

History and etymology

The use of ultrasound to diagnose pneumothorax was first described in a veterinary medical journal in 1986 4.

Differential Diagnosis

The bilateral, anterior discovery of sliding lung is sufficient to rule out pneumothorax in the vast majority of cases. Bilateral absence of B-lines/comet tail artifacts from the pleura with loss of the lung pulse and sliding, and subsequent discovery of a lung point in a typical location is quite specific for the presence of a pneumothorax. The differential for bilaterally absent lung sliding includes;

  • fibrotic lung disease
  • abdominal compartment syndrome
  • status asthmaticus
  • apnoea
  • cardiopulmonary arrest

Unilateral loss of sliding may suggest 5

  • in the context of chest trauma and recent endotracheal intubation may represent right mainstem bronchus intubation
    • a vigorous lung pulse will be present, as the visceral and parietal pleura are still apposed
    • ultrasound may be used, real-time, to "guide" the endotracheal tube proximally, confirming position with the bilateral return of lung sliding and diaphragmatic excursion
  • may also represent complete atelectasis
    • early signs of atelectasis are dynamic; sliding is lost, there is no lung point to be found, the lung pulse is unmasked, the diaphragm is elevated with reduced excursion
    • a posterolateral tissue-like pattern develops over time, with the early presence of static air bronchograms, often lost as the air is resorbed
  • if loss of sliding and an A-line pattern meet a perpendicular, anechoic collection, the hydro-point is defined
  • -<p><strong>Pneumothorax </strong>is a serious potential consequence of blunt thoracic trauma and, if misdiagnosed, it may quickly become life-threatening.</p><p>For a discussion on epidemiology, clinical presentation, pathology, and treatment and prognosis please see the main <a href="/articles/pneumothorax">pneumothorax</a> article. </p><h4>Radiographic features</h4><p>CT is considered the gold-standard in the diagnosis of pneumothorax. Thoracic ultrasound has more sensitivity than a <a href="/articles/supine-chest-radiograph">supine chest radiograph</a> (see: supine <a href="/articles/pneumothorax">pneumothorax</a>) for the identification of pneumothorax after blunt trauma. The other advantage of ultrasound is that it can be used at point-of-care. </p><p>The normal lung interface with pleura shows lung sliding with vertical comet tails running down from the pleural surface. In pneumothorax, this sliding is absent and so are the comet tail artifacts from the pleura. This is due to gas in between the parietal and visceral pleura, preventing lung from sliding.</p><p>Visualising the junction between sliding lung and absent sliding is known as the <a href="/articles/lung-point-sign">lung point sign</a> and is near 100% specific for pneumothorax and also gives an indication of pneumothorax size by its location. It is not able to be found in all pneumothorax cases (sensitivity is around 65%) especially large pneumothoraces where the lung is collapsed and there is globally absent sliding. </p><p>On M mode, classical signs for the gray scale imaging are seen:</p><ul>
  • +<p><strong>Pneumothorax </strong>is a serious potential consequence of blunt thoracic trauma and, if misdiagnosed, it may quickly become life-threatening.</p><p>For a discussion on epidemiology, clinical presentation, pathology, and treatment and prognosis please see the main <a href="/articles/pneumothorax">pneumothorax</a> article. </p><h4>Radiographic features</h4><p>CT is considered the gold-standard in the diagnosis of pneumothorax. Thoracic ultrasound has more sensitivity than a <a href="/articles/supine-chest-radiograph">supine chest radiograph</a> (see: supine <a href="/articles/pneumothorax">pneumothorax</a>) for the identification of pneumothorax after blunt trauma. The other advantage of ultrasound is that it can be used at point-of-care. </p><p>The normal lung interface with pleura shows lung sliding with vertical comet tails running down from the pleural surface. In pneumothorax, this sliding is absent and so are the comet tail artifacts from the pleura, the sight of even a single B-line ruling out a pneumothorax at that location. There is also loss of the lung pulse, the subtle lung oscillation in tandem with cardiac contraction, which is especially important when trying to distinguish between right mainstem intubation (loss of sliding on the left, but lung pulse is present) and a left sided pneumothorax (no sliding or lung pulse). Free intrathoracic air will then reflect incident ultrasound waves, obscuring the visceral pleura beneath; as all signs in lung ultrasonography fundamentally originate from the pleura, they are too abolished. </p><p>Visualizing the junction between sliding lung and absent sliding is known as the <a href="/articles/lung-point-sign">lung point sign</a> and is near 100% specific for pneumothorax. One may use the mid-axillary line as a landmark for subsequent semi-quantification of the pneumothorax volume. location. It is not able to be found in all pneumothorax cases (sensitivity is around 65%) especially large pneumothoraces where the lung is collapsed and there is globally absent sliding. </p><p>On M mode, classical signs for the gray scale imaging are seen:</p><ul>
  • -</ul><h4>History and etymology</h4><p>The use of ultrasound to diagnose pneumothorax was first described in a veterinary medical journal in 1986 <sup>4</sup>.</p>
  • +</ul><h4>History and etymology</h4><p>The use of ultrasound to diagnose pneumothorax was first described in a veterinary medical journal in 1986 <sup>4</sup>. </p><h4>Differential Diagnosis</h4><p>The bilateral, anterior discovery of sliding lung is sufficient to rule out pneumothorax in the vast majority of cases. Bilateral absence of B-lines/comet tail artifacts from the pleura with loss of the lung pulse and sliding, and subsequent discovery of a lung point in a typical location is quite specific for the presence of a pneumothorax. The differential for bilaterally absent lung sliding includes;</p><ul>
  • +<li>fibrotic lung disease</li>
  • +<li>abdominal compartment syndrome</li>
  • +<li>status asthmaticus</li>
  • +<li>apnoea</li>
  • +<li>cardiopulmonary arrest</li>
  • +</ul><p> </p><p>Unilateral loss of sliding may suggest <sup>5</sup></p><ul>
  • +<li>in the context of chest trauma and recent endotracheal intubation may represent right mainstem bronchus intubation<ul>
  • +<li>a vigorous lung pulse will be present, as the visceral and parietal pleura are still apposed</li>
  • +<li>ultrasound may be used, real-time, to "guide" the endotracheal tube proximally, confirming position with the bilateral return of lung sliding and diaphragmatic excursion</li>
  • +</ul>
  • +</li>
  • +<li>may also represent complete atelectasis<ul>
  • +<li>early signs of atelectasis are dynamic; sliding is lost, there is no lung point to be found, the lung pulse is unmasked, the diaphragm is elevated with reduced excursion</li>
  • +<li>a posterolateral tissue-like pattern develops over time, with the early presence of static air bronchograms, often lost as the air is resorbed</li>
  • +</ul>
  • +</li>
  • +<li>if loss of sliding and an A-line pattern meet a perpendicular, anechoic collection, the <a title="hydro-point" href="/articles/hydro-point">hydro-point</a> is defined<ul><li>pathognomonic for a fluid-air interface e.g. a <a title="Hydropneumothorax" href="/articles/hydropneumothorax">hydropneumothorax</a>
  • +</li></ul>
  • +</li>
  • +</ul>

References changed:

  • 5. Lichtenstein DA, Menu Y. A bedside ultrasound sign ruling out pneumothorax in the critically ill. Lung sliding. (1995) Chest. 108 (5): 1345-8. <a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7587439">Pubmed</a> <span class="ref_v4"></span>
  • 6. Gelabert C, Nelson M. Bleb point: mimicker of pneumothorax in bullous lung disease. (2015) The western journal of emergency medicine. 16 (3): 447-9. <a href="https://doi.org/10.5811/westjem.2015.3.24809">doi:10.5811/westjem.2015.3.24809</a> - <a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25987927">Pubmed</a> <span class="ref_v4"></span>

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