Abstract

The insertion of a chest tube in cases of large pleural effusion or spontaneous pneumothorax is a common surgical procedure often performed by a physician in training under the supervision of a senior physician. The authors report the case of a 35-year-old man with a persistent, complete spontaneous pneumothorax of approximately 30 hours' duration. Within 90 minutes after insertion of a chest tube, he developed severe unilateral pulmonary edema and required mechanical ventilation. FINDINGS AND CLINICAL COURSE: Computerized tomography revealed severe, unilateral pulmonary edema referred to as re-expansion pulmonary edema. After emergency endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation with continuous positive airway pressure, the pulmonary edema resolved completely and the patient recovered. Re-expansion edema is a rare, potentially life-threatening complication of the drainage of a spontaneous pneumothorax. With early recognition and timely treatment, complete resolution can be achieved. Risk factors include rapid re-expansion of the lung, young patient age, and a large pneumothorax persisting longer than 24 hours. If these risk factors are present, the chest tube should be inserted without primary suction. Doing so allows the lung to re-expand more slowly and may prevent this severe complication.

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