Thoracic Trauma

Chapter 62 Thoracic Trauma





2 How does thoracic trauma differ in children and adults?


Pediatric thoracic trauma differs from adult thoracic trauma in mechanism of injury, type of injury, and other organ systems involved. Falls are the most common mechanism of injury in infants and children. Older children are often injured as pedestrians or unrestrained passengers in motor vehicle accidents. Adolescents are more likely to be occupants in motor vehicle–related accidents and to experience penetrating injuries secondary to violence.


Lung contusion is the most common pediatric thoracic injury, with intrapleural injury second. Only 30% of children, compared with 50–75% of adults, sustain rib fractures because of increased compliance in the pediatric thoracic cage secondary to increased cartilage content and greater elasticity of the bones. Thus, a child may have an internal injury (lung contusion) without external evidence of trauma (rib fracture, laceration, bruising). The pediatric trachea has a smaller internal diameter than the adult trachea; therefore, a small amount of obstruction secondary to blood, secretions, or edema can cause significant respiratory distress and hypoxia. The younger pediatric patient is also more sensitive to hypoxia and may develop reflex bradycardia or asystole. In evaluating pediatric patients with thoracic trauma, the health care provider must consider head, neck, and intra-abdominal injuries because approximately 80% of cases of thoracic trauma in children are part of multisystem injury. Thoracic trauma is routinely associated with abdominal trauma in children because the chest and abdominal cavities lie in close proximity.





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Sep 1, 2016 | Posted by in EMERGENCY MEDICINE | Comments Off on Thoracic Trauma

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