Abstract

Blunt chest wall trauma is a major cause of morbidity and mortality, especially in the presence of a flail chest where paradoxical inward movement of the flail segment in inspiration is found. Patients with a flail chest require aggressive pain control, pulmonary toilet, and often intubation and mechanical ventilation to establish an internal pneumatic stabilization of the flail segment. This may result in a prolonged ICU stay and pulmonary complications including pneumonia, septicemia and barotrauma. The high mortality rate of up to 10 –36% –12 is partly due to the high prevalence of associated life-threatening extra-thoracic injuries. However, one principle cause of death consists of pneumonia and sepsis with prolonged intubation. Several potential advantages of operative chest wall stabilizations have been reported. These include reduced duration of mechanical ventilation, shortened ICU stay and hospitalization, and decreased likelihood of clinically significant long-term respiratory dysfunction and skeletal deformity. Despite the advantages of operative chest wall fixation, little consensus on the fixation technique exists. This report describes three cases of flail chest injury managed by operative stabilization with plates and screws. The criteria for surgical intervention in this trauma center are traumatic loss of 30% of pleural cavity volume, inability to wean an awake patient from the ventilator, inability to control chest wall pain despite epidural catheter, major air leak or major bleeding, or unstable sternal fracture with overlap. In all three cases a standard posterolateral thoracotomy was performed. The serratus anterior was retracted anteriorly and the latissimus dorsi was divided. To reach more cranially a small portion of the trapezius and the rhomboids were transected in cases 2 and 3. The chest was always entered and hematoma was removed. Pelvic, mandibular and customized reconstruction plates were used, with bending stiffness ranging from 1,936 over 414 to 56 kN mm, respectively. In addition to documentation of the technique, this report describes the results obtained with three distinct osteosynthesis plates and provides a historic overview of alternative fixation means.

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