Traumatic Chest Lesions in Patients with Severe Head Trauma

Abstract
In patients with severe craniocerebral trauma, who need a continuous positive-pressure breathing, the detection of pulmonary and mediastinal traumatic lesions, especially pneumothorax, may alter the management. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficiency and accuracy of conventional supine chest roentgenograms to detect the associated traumatic chest lesions in severe craniocerebral trauma and to compare their value as a diagnostic method for the identification of unsuspected lesions with a limited chest computed tomographic (CT) examination. Forty-seven consecutive patients with severe craniocerebral trauma underwent head CT and a prospective limited CT examination of the thorax in the same session. Nine patients (19.1%) presented a pneumothorax, bilateral in one case. Six pneumothoraces (60%) were identified both on conventional chest roentgenograms and CT, whereas in four cases (40%), the lesion was only detectable on CT. The CT study also showed 31 areas of pulmonary parenchymal contusions in 19 subjects (40%), whereas the conventional chest roentgenograms demonstrated 17 areas of contusions in 11 (23%) subjects. One thoracic aorta and one right diaphragm rupture were detected on CT study. On the conventional chest roentgenograms the mediastinal vascular injury was overlooked, whereas the right diaphragmatic rupture was highly suspected. The limited chest CT examination supplied additional information in 30% of patients. In 12.7% of patients, this information was clinically significant enough to alter the management. In patients with severe craniocerebral trauma evaluation of associated chest trauma by a supplementary limited chest CT, examination provides more and precise information about the size and severity of mediastinal and pulmonary lesions with a superior detectability of pneumothorax.