Treatment of Acute, Unstable Chest Wall Injuries
Blunt Injury of Thorax, Flail Chest, Chest Wall Injury Trauma
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Blunt Injury of Thorax focused on measuring unstable chest injury, flail chest, chest wall injury, rib fracture
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Age >16 or skeletal maturity
Meeting one of the two indication for surgical fixation of chest wall injury:
Flail chest, defined as follows:
- 3 unilateral segmental rib fractures; OR
- 3 bilateral rib fractures; OR
- 3 unilateral fractures combined with sternum fracture/dissociation Note: at least 3 of the rib fractures involved in the flail segment must demonstrate displacement.
Severe deformity of the chest wall (Diagnosed by CT scan). Defined as follows:
- Severe (100%) displacement of 3 or more ribs OR
- Marked loss thoracic volume/caved in chest (>25% volume loss in involved lobe(s)); OR
- Overriding of 3 or more rib fractures (by minimum 15mm each); OR
- Two or more rib fractures associated with intra-parenchymal injury - ie ribs in the lung, in the parenchyma
Exclusion Criteria:
- Anatomic location of rib fractures are not amenable to surgical fixation (eg fractures directly adjacent to spinal column)
- Rib fractures primarily involving floating ribs (ribs 10-12)
- Home Oxygen (O2) requirement
- Other significant injuries that may require long term intubation:
- Severe pulmonary contusion (Defined as PaO2/FIO2 ratio <200 with radiological evidence of pulmonary infiltrates WITHIN 24 hours of THORACIC TRAUMA)
- Severe head injury/Traumatic brain injury - (GCS ≤ 8 at 48 hrs post injury. If unable to assess full GCS due to intubation or other causes, GCS motor ≤4 at 48 hrs post injury)
- Upper airway injury requiring long term intubation and mechanical ventilation (e.g. tracheal disruption)
- Acute quadriplegia/quadraparesis
- Head and neck burn injuries, or inhalation burn injuries
- Dementia or other inability to complete follow-up questionnaires
- Medically unstable for OR (e.g. haemodynamic instability, acidosis, coagulopathy, etc.)* or unlikely to survive 1 year follow-up, in the opinion of the attending physician
- Lack of informed consent from patient or substitute decision maker
- Randomization > 72 hours from injury
- ORIF > 96 hours from injury (if randomized to surgical fixation group)
- Age > 85
Sites / Locations
- St. Michael's Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
Surgical fixation
non-operative
The fractures will be reduced and stabilized by use of plates and screws Attempt will be made to stabilize ribs 3-7, as these are surgically accessible and most important in maintaining integrity of the chest cavity. Goal is not to fix all the fractures, but to fix sufficient fractures to create an internal splint and allow chest wall motion to occur as a unit. In case of fibs fractured at numerous locations, as many fragments will be reduced and stabilized as necessary to ensure movement as a unit. Chest tube(s) will be placed at the discretion of the treating surgeon in patients with pre-operative or intra-operative violation of the pleural cavity (ie pre-op pneumothorax/haemothorax, iatrogenic pleural injury). No post-operative drains will be inserted.
Mechanical ventilation: Patients in respiratory distress will receive endotracheal intubation, and placed on mechanical ventilation. PEEP will be utilized as needed, at the discretion of the ICU and respiratory therapy team. Other conservative means/Pulmonary toilet:Patients will receive aggressive pulmonary toilet (suctioning of ET tube as needed), chest physiotherapy (as per standard local protocol), and will have the head of the bed elevated to 30° unless contraindicated (ie unstable C-spine injury). Pain control:Epidural catheters, intercostal nerve block, PCA, IV/PO pain medication