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Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
RECOGNITION AND ASSESSMENT
- Take history, clinical examination and chest X-ray
INITIAL MANAGEMENT
Clinically pleural infection
- See Pleural infection and empyema guideline
Clinically transudate
- e.g. LVF, hypoalbuminaemia, dialysis
- Treat underlying cause
Outcome of treatment
- If the effusion has resolved, stop further investigations for pleural effusion
- If the effusion has not resolved, follow Clinically exudate/unresolved
Clinically exudate/unresolved
- Refer to respiratory physician
- Pleural aspiration under ultrasound guidance - see Pleural aspiration of fluid guideline
- Send samples for: cytology, protein, LDH, glucose, pH, Gram stain, culture and sensitivity and TB cultures
- take blood at same time for LDH, protein and glucose
- If chylothorax suspected, send samples for cholesterol and triglyceride and for centrifuging
- If haemothorax suspected, send sample for haematocrit
- If rheumatoid disease suspected, send samples for glucose and complement
- If pancreatitis, pancreatic pseudocyst, pregnancy, pleural malignancy or acute rupture of oesophagus suspected, send sample for amylase
INTERPRETATION OF RESULTS FROM PLEURAL ASPIRATION
Appearance
- If the fluid has a putrid odour, suspect anaerobic empyema
- If the fluid has food particles, suspect oesophageal rupture
- If the fluid is bile stained, suspect chylothorax (biliary fistula)
- If the fluid is milky, suspect chylothorax/pseudochylothorax
- If grossly bloody, consider malignancy, pulmonary infarction, trauma, benign asbestos effusion or post-cardiac injury syndrome
- If in doubt about haemothorax, request haematocrit on pleural fluid:
- if haematocrit <1%, blood in pleural space is not significant
Biochemistry
- If serum protein is normal and:
- fluid protein >35 g/L, fluid is most likely exudate
- fluid protein <25 g/L, fluid is most likely transudate
- fluid protein between 25 and 35 g/L, use Light’s criteria as below
- Light’s criteria: an exudative effusion is defined when one of the following is present
- pleural fluid protein/serum protein >0.5
- pleural fluid LDH/serum LDH >0.6
- pleural fluid LDH >2/3 x upper limit of normal serum LDH
- Pleural fluid pH
- >7.4 suggests transudative effusion, and virtually rules out tuberculous effusion
- <7.3 suggests exudative effusion
- <7.2 in parapneumonic effusion indicates thick empyema requiring tube drainage
- <7.1 in malignant pleural effusion is a bad prognostic sign (mean survival <6 weeks)
- Pleural fluid glucose <3.3 mmol/L is found in:
- empyema, tuberculosis, malignancy
- rheumatoid disease, SLE
- oesophageal rupture
- Pleural fluid glucose <2 mmol/L or pleural fluid glucose/serum glucose <0.5 mmol/L
- in parapneumonic effusion indicates complicated pleural infection requiring tube drainage
- in malignant pleural effusion is a bad prognostic indicator
- If pleural fluid glucose >1.6 mmol/L or pleural fluid C4 complement >0.04 g/L, effusion unlikely to be caused by rheumatoid disease
- In pancreatitis, pancreatic pseudocyst, pregnancy or pleural malignancy, acute rupture of oesophagus, amylase is high
- higher than upper limit for normal and pleural fluid/serum ratio >1
Cytology
- Positive in only 60% of malignant effusions
- if first specimen negative, refer to respiratory physicians for pleural biopsy
- Pleural lymphocytosis common in malignancy and TB, but not diagnostic
- Pleural eosinophilia not diagnostic
Microbiology and histology in case of possible TB effusion
- Smears for AAFB positive in 10-20% only; cultures positive in 25-50%
- addition of pleural biopsy for TB culture and histology raises diagnostic rate to 90%
SUBSEQUENT MANAGEMENT
Known diagnosis
- If the fluid is a transudate, treat cause
- If the fluid in an exudate, treat appropriately
Still unknown diagnosis
Further investigations
- Request contrast-enhanced CT thorax - see Prevention of contrast-induced acute kidney injury guideline
- Consider pleural biopsy under LA, thoracoscopy, VATS or radiological guidance
- Send biopsy for histology and TB culture together with a repeat pleural aspiration for cytology, microbiology studies +/- special tests
- If symptomatic, drain fluid
Outcome
- If cause found, treat appropriately
- if pleural infection and/or empyema, see Pleural infection and empyema guideline
- If no cause found, reconsider thoracoscopy
- if still no cause found, reconsider treatable conditions such as PE, TB, chronic heart failure and lymphoma
- wait and watch as appropriate