Abstract

Flail chest is a severe injury to the chest wall and is related to adverse outcomes. A flail chest is classified as the physiologic, paradoxical motion of a chest wall or flail segment of rib fracture (RFX). We hypothesized that patients with paradoxical chest wall movement would present different clinical features from patients with a flail segment. This retrospective observational study included patients with blunt chest trauma who visited our level 1 trauma center between January 2019 and October 2022 and were diagnosed with one or more flail segments by computed tomography. The primary outcome of our study was a clinically diagnosed visible, paradoxical chest wall motion. We used the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO) logistic regression model to minimize overfitting. After a feature selection using the LASSO regression model, we constructed a multivariable logistic regression (MLR) model and nomogram. A total of five risk factors were selected in the LASSO model and applied to the multivariable logistic regression model. Of these, four risk factors were statistically significant: the total number of RFX (adjusted OR [aOR], 1.28; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.09–1.49; p = 0.002), number of segmental RFX including Grade III fractures (aOR, 1.78; 95% CI, 1.14–2.79; p = 0.012), laterally located primary fracture lines (aOR, 4.00; 95% CI, 1.69–9.43; p = 0.002), and anterior–lateral flail segments (aOR, 4.20; 95% CI, 1.60–10.99; p = 0.004). We constructed a nomogram to predict the personalized probability of the flail motion. A novel nomogram was developed in patients with flail segments of traumatic RFX to predict paradoxical chest wall motion. The number of RFX, Grade III segmental RFX, and the location of the RFX were significant risk factors.

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