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Updated: May 13 2017

Pleural Effusion

Snapshot
  • A 59-year-old man retCXRurns to the hospital with chest pain and difficulty breathing a couple of weeks after being discharged following a myocardial infarctation requiring immediate cardiac catheterization. He has been coughing up frothy sputum for the past three days.
Introduction
  • Pathologic accumulation of fluid in the pleural space
    • often parapneumonic (in association with pneumonia) 
    • if infected, known as an empyema
  • Effusions classified by pathogenesis and by using Light's criteria 
    • Light's Criteria: if any one of these is true, then the pleural fluid is likely exudative
      • Pleural protein/serum ratio >0.5
      • Pleural LDH/serum ratio >0.6
      • Pleural LDH >2/3 the lab's upper limit of normal
    • Transudative
      • occur secondary to increased pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) or decreased oncotic pressure
    • Exudative
      • occur secondary to increased pleural vascular permeability

 

    Transudative
    Exudative
    Intact capillaries lead to protein poor pleural fluid Inflammation leads to leaky capillaries, resulting in a protein rich pleural fluid

    Common causes include:
    CHF

    nephrotic syndrome
    cirrhosis

    protein losing enteropathy

    SLE or RA

    Common causes include:
    malignancy
    TB
    bacterial infection
    empyema
    viral infections
    PE with infarct
    RA, SLE
    pancreatitis
    pericarditis
    post-MI
    pneumonia
    pulmonary embolism
    trauma
    specific gravity < 1.016 specific gravity > 1.016
    Protein < 3 g/dl Protein > 3 g/dl
    pleural/serum protein
    < 0.5
    pleural/serum protein > 0.5
    pleural/serum LDH
    < 0.6
    pleural/serum LDH > 0.6
Presentation
  • Symptoms
    • often asymptomatic
    • may present with dyspnea
    • pleuritic chest pain
    • cough
  • Presentation 
    • dullness to percussion
    • decreased breath sounds over the effusion
    • decreased tactile fremitus
      • versus consolidation, which produces increased tactile fremitus
Evaluation
  • CXR
    • shows blunting of the costophrenic angles
    • decubitus CXR will identify free-flowing versus loculated fluid collections
  • CT
    • sometimes used to confirm diagnosis, if hesitant to proceed with thoracentesis
  • Thoracentesis
    • diagnostic gold standard
    • indicated for new effusions >1cm in decubitus view
    • send pleural fluid for CBC, protein, LDH, pH, glucose, Gram stain
    • send for cytology if neoplasm is suspected
    • use criteria in above table to classify the effusion
Differential
  • Etiologies listed above must all be considered in differential diagnosis prior to thoracentesis
Treatment
  • Non-operative
    • treat underlying condition
      • always indicated as first-line therapy
  • Operative
    • thoracentesis
      • indicated for drainage of fluid collections
    • pleurodesis
      • indicated in malignant effusions that do not respond to chemo/radiation
    • chest tube
      • indicated, in addition to antibiotics, if evidence of a complicated pleural effusion or empyema
        • large, loculated, pH < 7.2, or a positive Gram stain 
        • may also have glucose <50 or LDH > 1000
        • vs uncomplicated (small or moderate, pH >7.2), which is treated with only antibiotics
      • indicated in the event of hemothorax
Prognosis, Prevention, and Complications
  • Prognosis
    • ranges widely and depends highly on nature of underlying condition
    • parapneumonic cases often resolve with the pneumonia
  • Prevention
    • early diagnosis and adequate treatment of some underlying conditions can prevent the development of a pleural effusion
    • some etiologies are unpreventable
    • pleurodesis is sometimes successful at preventing recurrence of effusion
  • Complications
    • can become infected and loculated, resulting in empyema requiring chest tube
    • can recur and lead to chronic fibrosis and subsequent terminal lung disease
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