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Traumatic hemothorax

Last updated: March 26, 2024

Summarytoggle arrow icon

Hemothorax is the accumulation of blood within the pleural cavity, most commonly resulting from intrathoracic vessel injuries caused by blunt or penetrating trauma or thoracic surgery. Spontaneous bleeding (i.e., nontraumatic hemothorax) is rare. Clinical features include respiratory distress, diminished breath sounds, and dullness to percussion over the affected lung field. Diagnosis is typically confirmed with chest x-ray, bedside ultrasound, or CT chest. Management most often involves chest tube insertion, evaluation by a thoracic surgeon, and hospital admission. Massive hemothorax may be present at the onset, or develop progressively, and can cause life-threatening hemorrhagic shock that requires urgent thoracotomy for source control and hemostasis.

See “Nontraumatic hemothorax” for the approach to spontaneous hemothorax.

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Etiologytoggle arrow icon

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Clinical featurestoggle arrow icon

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Diagnosistoggle arrow icon

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Approach [1][2][3]

Consider chest tube insertion for all hemothoraces, regardless of size. [7]

Massive hemothorax [2]

Retained hemothorax [3][7]

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We list the most important complications. The selection is not exhaustive.

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