Abstract

Pneumothorax is defined as the accumulation of air in the pleural space. A distinction is made between a primary (idiopathic) spontaneous pneumothorax (PSP), secondary spontaneous pneumothorax (SSP) as well as between iatrogenic pneumothorax and traumatic pneumothorax. Primary spontaneous pneumothorax (PSP) occurs mainly in otherwise healthy people (mainly tall and thin young men) without any clinical sign of lung disease. In contrast, secondary pneumothorax (SSP) mostly occurs in patients with diagnosed and clinically manifested lung disease and is most frequent in older subjects (> 50 years). Smokers have a higher risk of developing pneumothorax. Most pneumothorax cases require a therapeutic intervention using thorax drainage. Observation alone is recommended for only those few patients suffering from pneumothorax without clinical symptoms. Although simple needle aspiration is often recommended as a first-line treatment, our clinical experience shows no advantage for most of the patients. All patients with symptomatic pneumothorax should be treated with immediate intercostal tube drainage. In the surgical therapy of pneumothorax, VATS (video-assisted thoracic surgery) is the current effective standard treatment. Open posterolateral thoracotomy is the recommend approach rather than the minimally invasive procedure in patient with serious illness or complications. The aim of both interventions is to reduce the recurrence rate of pneumothorax as much as possible.

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