Tension pneumothorax
Tension pneumothorax
Clinical Setting
I: You are the ICU registrar and are called to assess bed 2
S: Nurse reports difficulty in getting reliable arterial line trace
B: 70-year-old ventilated patient with new fever, radial arterial line in situ, metaraminol running – trouble with trace
A: Unable to aspirate
R: Called for help
Potential Clinical Course
- Initially A ETT, B Sp02 80% on FiO2 0.6, TV 250ml, ETCO2 4.5kPa (climbing), RR 14 (controlled), auscultation clear on left, quiet on right, trachea deviated to left, C HR 115, BP 98/52 (falling), CRT >3sec, D sedated
- BP continues to fall, cardiac arrest
- Initial rhythm sinus tachycardia (PEA)
- Exclude relevant reversible causes. Patient has a right-sided tension pneumothorax: continue for a further cycle if not identified and treated
- Decompressive thoracostomy
- ROSC
- Asks for equipment for a chest drain
- Post resuscitation care
Information for Faculty
- Initial settings: SpO2 97% on FiO2 0.5
- ETCO2 4.5kPa
- RR 14
- Clear auscultation left lung field, quiet at right apex
- HR 88bpm SR
- BP 114/67
- Initial deterioration: SpO2 94% on FiO2 0.5
- ETCO2 4.5kPa
- RR 14
- Clear auscultation left lung field, quiet on right lung field
- HR 98bpm SR
- BP 105/52
- Progress to: SpO2 70% if FiO2 not increased. If increased then 85%
- ETCO2 3.0kPa
- RR (depending upon candidate’s ventilator settings)
- HR 146bpm SR
- BP 76/34
- Cardiac arrest: PEA
- SpO2 unrecordable
- ETCO2 4
- RR depends on patient ventilator settings/manual bagging
- BP dependent on chest compressions
(Post needle thoracostomy)
- ROSC: SpO2 90% increasing to 94%
- ETCO2 3.0kPa rising to 4.2kPa
- HR 118bpm ST
- BP 145/88
Scenario ends when candidate requests equipment for formal chest drain.
Faculty Roles
Bedside Nurse 1:
- You are a senior critical care nurse
- You have received a 70 year old lady from the ED, already intubated and ventilated due to a community acquired pneumonia and worsening hypoxia.
- You are concerned that the arterial line isn’t working in a ventilated patient on metaraminol
- Do not volunteer the information that the patient has recently had a central line placed – however, if they ask you to give anything down the central line ask if they have ordered a CXR to check the position. If they have not worked out that the patient has a tension pneumothorax once they have a cardiac arrest, ask if it’s okay to use the central line without an x-ray
Bedside Nurse 2:
- You are a new starter
- You have basic nursing skills but no specific ICU/airway skills
- You have no idea what is going on, and seem pretty disinterested unless the candidate declares a tension pneumothorax/emergency
HiLLO: 5, 6