FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Patients with serious underlying disease, intractable pain, or immunocompromised
- Patients with suicidal ideation
Discharge Criteria
Patients with uncomplicated fibromyalgia can be managed as outpatients.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Lifestyle modifications:
- Physical exercise should be encouraged:
- Exercise program should be gradual to avoid overexertion and discouragement.
- Aerobic exercise is more beneficial than simple stretching.
- Efficacy not maintained if exercise stops
- Good sleep pattern should also be discussed:
- Establishing nightly ritual in preparation for sleep
- Avoiding caffeine-containing beverages or foods in afternoon or evenings
- Encourage stress management and coping strategies.
- Participation in educational programs (e.g., cognitive-behavioral therapy):
- Improvement is often sustained for months.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
As fibromyalgia patients can develop acute symptoms, distinguishing between acute and chronic pain is critical.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Ablin JN, Buskila D, Clauw DJ. Biomarkers in fibromyalgia.
Curr Pain Headache Rep
. 2009;13(5):343–349.
- Fitzcharles MA, Yunus MB. The clinical concept of fibromyalgia as a changing paradigm in the past 20 years.
Pain Res Treat.
2012;2012:184835.
- Mease PJ, Choy EH. Pharmacotherapy of fibromyalgia.
Rheum Dis Clin North Am
. 2009;35:359–372.
- Russell IJ, Larson AA. Neurophysiopathogenesis of fibromyalgia syndrome: A unified hypothesis.
Rheum Dis Clin North Am
. 2009;35:421–435.
- Williams DA, Schilling S. Advances in the assessment of fibromyalgia.
Rheum Dis Clin North Am
. 2009;35:339–357.
- Wolfe F, Clauw DJ, Fitzcharles MA, et al. The American College of Rheumatology preliminary diagnostic criteria for fibromyalgia and measurement of symptom severity.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken)
. 2010;62(5):600–610.
CODES
ICD9
729.1 Myalgia and myositis, unspecified
FLAIL CHEST
Stephen L. Thornton
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Free-floating segment of chest wall:
- 3 or more adjacent ribs are fractured in 2 or more places.
- Rib fractures in conjunction with sternal fractures or costochondral separations
- The free-floating segment of chest wall paradoxically moves inward during inspiration and outward during expiration.
- The principal pathology associated with flail chest is the
associated pulmonary contusion:
- There is no alteration in ventilatory mechanics owing to the free-floating segment.
ETIOLOGY
- Blunt thoracic trauma
- Fall from a height
- Motor vehicle accident
- Assault
- Missile injury
- Ribs usually break at the point of impact or posterior angle:
- Ribs 4–9 most prone to fracture.
- Weakest point of ribs is 60° rotation from sternum.
- Transfer of kinetic energy to the lung parenchyma adjacent to the injury:
- Disruption of the alveolocapillary membrane and development of pulmonary contusion
- Arteriovenous shunting
- Ventilation/perfusion mismatch
- Hypoxemia
- Respiratory failure may result.
Pediatric Considerations
- Relatively elastic chest wall makes rib fractures less common in children.
- Presence of rib fractures implies much higher energy absorption.
Geriatric Considerations
Much more susceptible to rib fractures:
- Described with low-energy mechanisms
- Complicated by osteoporosis
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Blunt thoracic trauma by any mechanism
- Mechanism as described by patient, parent, or pre-hospital personnel:
- Seat belt usage
- Steering wheel damage
- Air bag deployment
- Localized chest wall pain increases with deep inspiration, coughing, moving
- Pleuritic chest pain
- Dyspnea
- Hemoptysis
Physical-Exam
- Flail chest paradoxically moves inward during inspiration and outward during expiration:
- Can be missed due to muscle spasm and splinting respirations.
- Inspection under tangential light may be useful.
- Multiple rib fractures:
- Bony step-offs
- Ecchymosis
- Crepitus
- Edema
- Erythema and tenderness associated with:
- Splinting respirations
- Intercostal muscle spasm
- Dyspnea, tachypnea
- Onset may be insidious, increasing over time.
- Cyanosis, tachycardia, hypotension
- Auscultation with initially normal breath sounds progressing to wet rales or absent breath sounds
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
Diagnosis is initially made on clinical grounds and then supported by radiographs.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
Arterial blood gas analysis:
- May reveal hypoxemia
- Elevated alveolar–arterial gradient
Imaging
- Chest radiograph aids diagnosis and prognosis:
- May reveal associated intrathoracic pathology:
- Pneumothorax
- Hemothorax
- Pneumomediastinum
- Pulmonary contusion
- Widened mediastinal silhouette
- Pulmonary contusion appears within 6–12 hr after injury:
- Ranges from patchy alveolar infiltrates to frank consolidation
- Thoracic CT is useful in detecting associated intrathoracic injuries not identified on chest radiograph:
- Thoracic CT found to show on average of 3 additional rib fractures compared with plain chest radiographs.
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Chest wall contusion or intercostal muscle strain
- Costochondral separation
- Sternal fracture and dislocation
- Radiographic differential diagnosis includes:
- ARDS
- Pulmonary laceration, infarction, or embolism
- CHF
- Pneumonia, abscess, other infectious processes
- Noncardiogenic causes of pulmonary edema
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Positioning the patient with the injured side down can stabilize the involved chest wall:
- Improve ventilation in noninjured hemithorax.
- Thoracic trauma with significant mechanism or combined with pre-existing pulmonary disease should be routed to the nearest trauma center.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Manage airway and resuscitate as indicated.
- IV line, O
2
, continuous cardiac monitoring, and pulse oximetry
- Control airway:
- Endotracheal intubation
- Indicated for patients with severe hypoxemia (PaO
2
<60 mm Hg on room air, <80 mm Hg on 100% O
2
)
- Significant underlying lung disease
- Impending respiratory failure
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Maintain adequate oxygenation and ventilation.
- Monitor O
2
saturation and respiratory rate.
- In conscious and alert patients, O
2
administration via face mask is first-line therapy.
- If patient cannot maintain a PaO
2
>80 mm Hg on high-flow oxygen, consider continuous positive airway pressure via mask or nasal bilevel positive airway pressure.
- Consider early endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation if the above fails:
- Physiologic internal fixation of the flail segment
- External fixation or stabilization of the flail segment is not indicated.
- Adequate pain control is critical to maintaining adequate pulmonary function:
- Avoid splinting, atelectasis, and pneumonia.
- Search for associated injuries and treat exacerbation of underlying lung disease.
- Intercostal nerve blocks with 0.5% bupivacaine are safe and effective when performed properly:
- Provides 6–12 hr of pain relief
- Perform intercostal nerve block posteriorly 2–3 fingerbreadths from the vertebral midline.
- Inject 0.5–1 mL just under the inferior surface of the rib where the neurovascular bundle is located.
- Aspirate 1st to be certain that the intercostal vessels have not been punctured.
- Prophylactic antibiotics are not indicated.