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. 1988 Nov;19(6):407-9.
doi: 10.1016/0020-1383(88)90135-0.

Reliability of physical examination in penetrating chest injuries

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Reliability of physical examination in penetrating chest injuries

A Hirshberg et al. Injury. 1988 Nov.

Abstract

The decision to insert an intercostal drain in chest injury must occasionally be made without a chest radiograph. A prospective analysis of the reliability of physical examination in penetrating pleural injuries was undertaken. A total of 51 consecutive patients were examined before obtaining a chest radiograph. The presumptive diagnosis and decision to institute intercostal drainage were compared with the radiological diagnosis and the actual decision in each patient. A policy of selective drainage of large pleural collections was employed. The series consisted mainly of stab injuries in young men. Physical examination accurately diagnosed 13 of the 14 large pneumo- or haemothoraces. This reliability combined with the selective drainage policy showed that physical examination accurately predicted the need for tube thoracostomy with a sensitivity of 96 per cent and a specificity of 93 per cent. This study suggests that experienced clinicians should not hesitate to institute immediate life-saving intercostal drainage when needed, before a chest radiograph is obtained.

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