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Chest Pain - Case 14-4: 17-Year-Old Boy

Chest Pain - Case 14-4: 17-Year-Old Boy: Excerpt from Pediatric Complaints and Diagnostic Dilemmas

I. History of Present Illness

A 17-year old boy presented with left-sided chest pain. He was well until 8 days before presentation, when he developed left axillary and shoulder pain. The pain was worse with inspiration. He denied fever, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. He reported that he had had rhinorrhea and a dry cough 2 weeks earlier. He had mild shortness of breath with exercise. He had no history of trauma.

II. Past Medical History

He had a history of depression with no history of suicide attempts. He denied a history of asthma or other chronic illnesses. His family and social histories were noncontributory. He denied any drug use but did admit to having smoked cigarettes in the past.

III. Physical Examination

T, 36.6°C; RR, 18 to 20/min; HR, 108 bpm; BP, 120/60 mm Hg; SpO2, 95% in room air
Weight, 50th to 75th percentile; height, 75th to 90th percentile
In general, he was in no acute respiratory distress. His chest examination revealed no chest wall deformity, and the chest was nontender to palpation. Breath sounds were decreased at the bases, left greater than right. No wheezes or rales were appreciated. His cardiac examination revealed normal S1 and S2, with no murmurs, rubs, or gallops heard. The remainder of his physical examination was normal.

IV. Diagnostic Studies

A complete blood count revealed 5,600 WBCs/mm3, with 55% segmented neutrophils, 31% lymphocytes, 11% monocytes, and 3% eosinophils. Electrolytes were normal.

V. Course of Illness

A chest roentgenogram was considered diagnostic (Fig. 14-3).
Discussion: Case 14-4

I. Differential Diagnosis

The differential diagnosis for chest pain in this adolescent boy focused on the acute nature of his pain. In general, the most common causes for chest pain in the adolescent age group are psychogenic pain, cough, asthma, musculoskeletal pain, and pneumonia. These causes most often produce a subacute and subtle type of chest pain.
Therefore, the acute onset of chest pain in this boy should focus the differential diagnosis on a number of other causes. Certainly, tobacco use or the abuse of cocaine or methamphetamine could cause the acute onset of chest pain secondary to vasospasm of the coronary arteries. Pneumothorax or pneumomediastinum commonly manifest with the acute onset of chest pain. Some abdominal processes, such as pancreatitis or cholecystitis, may manifest with acute chest pain. Cardiovascular causes are less common but are life-threatening. With acute chest pain, one should consider coronary artery disease, arrhythmias, structural cardiac defects, and infections.

II. Diagnosis

A chest roentgenogram revealed a left pneumothorax (Fig. 14-3). The diagnosis is left spontaneous pneumothorax.

III. Incidence, Epidemiology and Pathophysiology

Pneumothoraces are divided into three groups: spontaneous, traumatic, and iatrogenic. Spontaneous pneumothoraces can be either primary, in which there is no underlying lung disease, or secondary, in which underlying lung pathology is present. The incidence of primary spontaneous pneumothorax ranges between 7.4 and 18 cases per 100,000 males and between 1.2 and 6 cases per 100,000 females. It is most common in tall, thin males between 10 and 30 years of age. Cigarette smoking increases the risk of developing a primary spontaneous pneumothorax in a dose-dependent fashion.
Secondary spontaneous pneumothoraces occur in patients with underlying lung disease. The major causes include airways disease (e.g., cystic fibrosis), infection (e.g., Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia), interstitial lung disease, connective tissue disease, malignancy, and thoracic endometriosis. The incidence of secondary spontaneous pneumothorax is 6.3 cases per 100,000 males and 2 cases per 100,000 females. Secondary spontaneous pneumothoraces have a later peak incidence, at 60 to 65 years of age.
Subpleural bullae are seen in 76% to 100% of children who are taken to video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery. There is some speculation as to the mechanism of bullae formation. It is likely that elastic fibers are degraded in the lung, which ultimately leads to an imbalance in the protease/antiprotease system and the development of bullae. A pneumothorax then develops as alveolar pressure increases and air subsequently leaks into the interstitium.

IV. Clinical Presentation

Primary spontaneous pneumothorax usually develops while the patient is at rest. Patients describe pleuritic ipsilateral chest pain and dyspnea. With a small pneumothorax, the physical examination may be completely normal. Tachycardia may be noted. In patients with a large pneumothorax, there may be poor chest wall movement, a hyperresonant chest, and decreased breath sounds on the side with the pneumothorax. Tachycardia and hypotension indicate that the patient has developed tension physiology and requires emergency intervention.
With a large pneumothorax, the patient develops decreased vital capacity and an increased alveolar –arterial oxygen gradient. In patients with primary spontaneous pneumothoraces, the underlying lung function is normal; therefore, they do not develop hypercapnia. In contrast, patients with secondary spontaneous pneumothoraces by definition have underlying lung disease and often develop hypercapnia.

V. Diagnostic Approach

Chest roentgenogram. A posterior-anterior chest roentgenogram reveals the presence of a pneumothorax. Small apical pneumothoraces may be difficult to detect in this fashion, and on occasion an expiratory roentgenogram is necessary.
Chest computed tomography. A chest CT scan may be necessary to differentiate a bulla from a pneumothorax.

VI. Treatment

A variety of treatment options exist for management of a pneumothorax, ranging from observation to simple aspiration with a catheter, chest tube insertion, pleurodesis, thoracoscopy with a single port, video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery, and thoracotomy.
Patients with small primary spontaneous pneumothoraces may be observed without intervention if there is no respiratory distress. They may be treated with supplemental oxygen to hasten the reabsorption of air. With supplemental oxygen, the air is reabsorbed at a rate of 2% per day. With larger primary spontaneous pneumothoraces, needle aspiration or chest tube insertion is required. Secondary spontaneous pneumothoraces are likely to require intervention, because patients are usually ill due to their underlying lung disease.
The main debate with spontaneous pneumothoraces is the ability to prevent recurrences. With a primary spontaneous pneumothorax, the recurrence rate is about 30%, and most recur 6 months to 2 years after the initial event. Smoking and younger age are risk factors for recurrent disease. The recurrence rate with secondary spontaneous pneumothoraces is similar at 39% to 47%.
The general consensus is to recommend preventative therapy after the second ipsilateral pneumothorax. However, patients who participate in risky activities such as scuba diving or flying should be considered for intervention after their first spontaneous pneumothorax. Options for recurrence prevention include the instillation of sclerosing agents through a chest tube and mechanical pleurodesis. With video-assisted thoracoscopic procedures, blebs can also be identified and oversewn.

VII. References

 1. Baumann MH, Strange C, Heffner JE, et al. Management of spontaneous pneumothorax: an American College of Chest Physicians Delphi Consensus Statement. Chest 2001;119:590–602.
2. Sahn SA, Heffner JE. Spontaneous pneumothorax. N Engl J Med 2000;342:868–874.
3. Weissberg D, Refaely Y. Pneumothorax: experience with 1,199 patients. Chest 2000;117:1279–1285.
4. Montgomery M. Air and liquid in the pleural space. In: Chernick V, Boat TF, eds. Kendig's disorders of the respiratory tract in children. Philadelphia: WB Saunders, 1998:403–409.

Pictures

Chest Pain - Case 14-4: 17-Year-Old Boy - 6070.1.png

Book Source Details

  • Book Title: Pediatric Complaints and Diagnostic Dilemmas
  • Author(s): Samir S Shah MD; Stephen Ludwig MD
  • Year of Publication: 2003
  • Copyright Details: Pediatric Complaints and Diagnostic Dilemmas, Copyright © 2003 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

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Copyright notice for book excerpts: Copyright © 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. All rights reserved.




More About This Book:
Title: Pediatric Complaints and Diagnostic Dilemmas
Authors: Samir S Shah MD; Stephen Ludwig MD
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Copyright: 2003
ISBN: 0-7817-4188-2

 » Next page: Chest Pain - Case 14-5: 3-Year-Old Girl (Pediatric Complaints and Diagnostic Dilemmas)

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