HEMOTHORAX
Definition
Hemothorax is the accumulation of blood in the pleural space.
It most commonly results from trauma (blunt or penetrating) but can also occur spontaneously or iatrogenically.
- Minimal hemothorax: <300 mL
- Moderate hemothorax: 300–1000 mL
- Massive hemothorax: >1000–1500 mL of blood initially drained or >200 mL/hr for 3 consecutive hours.
ETIOLOGY
1. Traumatic Causes (Most Common)
- Blunt trauma: rib fractures lacerating intercostal or internal mammary arteries, lung parenchyma.
- Penetrating trauma: injury to chest wall vessels, lung, heart, or great vessels.
- Iatrogenic:
- Central venous catheter insertion
- Thoracentesis
- Pleural biopsy
- Pacemaker lead placement
- Lung/mediastinal surgery.
2. Non-Traumatic (Spontaneous) Causes
- Spontaneous hemothorax:
- Rupture of vascularized adhesions (e.g., from pleuritis or tuberculosis)
- Ruptured vascular malformations or aneurysms
- Neoplasms (mesothelioma, metastatic, angiosarcoma)
- Pulmonary embolism with infarction
- Endometriosis (catamenial hemothorax)
- Coagulopathies or anticoagulant therapy.
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Blood enters pleural space → lung compression → atelectasis → hypoxia.
- Loss of intravascular volume → hypovolemia and shock.
- Clotted hemothorax → acts as a space-occupying lesion and medium for infection → empyema or fibrothorax.
CLINICAL FEATURES
Symptoms
- Dyspnea
- Chest pain (pleuritic)
- Cough
- Signs of shock (tachycardia, hypotension, pallor) if blood loss is significant
Signs
- Inspection: decreased chest movement on affected side
- Palpation: tracheal deviation to opposite side (if large), decreased tactile fremitus
- Percussion: dullness over affected area
- Auscultation: decreased or absent breath sounds
- Signs of hypovolemia: tachycardia, hypotension, cold extremities
DIAGNOSIS
1. Imaging
Chest X-ray
- Homogenous opacity with meniscus sign (blunting of costophrenic angle)
- Mediastinal shift to opposite side in massive hemothorax
- May miss <300 mL of blood in supine films → look for diffuse haziness without clear costophrenic angle.
Ultrasound (E-FAST)
- Most sensitive bedside test for trauma.
- Detects as little as 20–100 mL of pleural fluid.
- Used in emergency to identify hemothorax along with pneumothorax and pericardial effusion.
CT Chest (Contrast-enhanced)
- Gold standard for detecting site and extent of bleeding.
- Detects active extravasation (“contrast blush”).
- Differentiates between clotted and liquid blood.
2. Diagnostic Thoracentesis
- If uncertain diagnosis.
- Fluid appears bloody; diagnostic if:
- Pleural fluid hematocrit ≥50% of peripheral blood hematocrit
- 25–50% suggests hemothorax with dilution.
COMPLICATIONS
- Clotted hemothorax
- Empyema thoracis (infected retained clot)
- Fibrothorax (organization and fibrosis of pleural cavity)
- Persistent pneumothorax (if lung not re-expanding)
- Re-expansion pulmonary edema (after rapid drainage).
MANAGEMENT
A. Initial Resuscitation (ATLS principles)
- Airway, Breathing, Circulation – address life-threatening issues.
- Oxygen supplementation.
- Large-bore IV access, fluid/blood resuscitation.
- Crossmatch blood and prepare for possible transfusion.
- Monitor vitals, urine output, ABG, Hb/Hct.
B. Definitive Management
1. Tube Thoracostomy (Intercostal Drain)
- Mainstay of treatment.
- Inserted in 5th intercostal space, anterior to mid-axillary line.
- Connect to underwater seal or suction.
- Drainage allows lung re-expansion and monitors ongoing bleeding.
Monitor for:
- Initial output:
- If >1500 mL immediately drained → Massive hemothorax → surgical indication
- Continuous bleeding:
- >200 mL/hr for 3 consecutive hours → Thoracotomy indicated
2. Surgical Indications (Thoracotomy)
- Massive hemothorax (>1500 mL initial drainage)
- Ongoing bleeding (>200 mL/hr for 3 hrs)
- Failure of lung re-expansion
- Persistent air leak (suggesting bronchovascular injury)
- Clotted/retained hemothorax
- Associated great vessel/cardiac injury
3. Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery (VATS)
- Used for retained or clotted hemothorax (24–72 hours window optimal).
- Early VATS reduces risk of empyema and fibrothorax.
4. Supportive Measures
- Analgesia (opioid, epidural, intercostal block)
- Antibiotics (broad-spectrum, especially with chest tube)
- Chest physiotherapy for lung expansion
- Serial CXR/Ultrasound to monitor resolution
C. Special Situations
1. Clotted/Retained Hemothorax
- If chest tube fails to drain → use VATS or intrapleural fibrinolytic therapy (streptokinase/urokinase) within 48–72 hrs.
2. Coagulopathy-Associated Hemothorax
- Correct INR/platelets prior to drainage if possible.
- Reversal agents or transfusion as indicated.
PROGNOSIS
- Depends on cause and associated injuries.
- Mortality high if massive bleeding from great vessels or delayed intervention.
- Prompt drainage and resuscitation improve outcomes.

