Rib Fractures
Isolated rib fractures
- Most common chest wall injury (others include sternum and clavicle)
- Clinical diagnosis mainly. Can use CXR to check for lung injury but may not be able to see fractures/all ribs.
- Can have underlying lung injury resulting in pneumothorax, haemothorax, pulmonary contusion.
- Management is mainly pain control – paracetamol/NSAIDS/opioids. Or use epidural, intercostal nerve blocks, PCA,
Flail chest
- Flail chest – 2 or more ribs broken at 2 or more places – a segment of chest wall moves paradoxically with respiration.
- Clinical diagnosis in ‘B’ of ATLS (life-threatening ATOMFC injuries) – confirm with CT chest.
- Respiratory compromise and pulmonary injury inevitable (as above).
- Management is give oxygen, ventilatory support, pain control (as above) and chest physiotherapy. Can also be fixed by ORIF of flail segment, but ?benefit.