DO NOT USE - ALL INFORMATION LIKELY INCORRECT IF NOT ACTIVELY DANGEROUS
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
INDICATIONS
- Diagnosis
- To relieve symptoms
CONTRAINDICATIONS
- All relative. Discuss with consultant
- Severe bullous emphysema or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
- Impaired blood clotting
CONSIDERATIONS
- If not competent in procedure, organise supervision by a clinician experienced in the procedure
Use of ultrasound
- Use ultrasound to guide aspiration
EQUIPMENT
- Cleansing pack
- Gloves
- Gown
- Lidocaine 1% plain maximum 20 mL
- 5 mL and 10 mL plastic syringes
Relief of symptoms (removal of large amounts of fluid)
- Pleural aspiration pack (if available)
- otherwise use cannula with 3-way tap and 50 mL syringe
Diagnostic aspiration only
- Green needle and 50 mL syringe
Specimen bottles
Fluid
- 3 sterile bottles (20 mL) for microbiology, biochemistry and cytology
- Oxalate bottle for glucose
- 2 blood culture bottles
Blood
- SST bottle (yellow top) for serum LDH and protein
- Fluoride/oxalate bottle (grey top) for glucose
For pH measurement:
- Plastic syringe: cap as used for blood gas measurement
- Unfractionated heparin 1000 units/mL
- Wash 5 mL syringe with unfractionated heparin
- Expel unfractionated heparin, leaving unfractionated heparin-coated syringe
- Cap syringe
PROCEDURE
- Review chest X-ray (PA +/- lateral if available)
- Take blood specimens
Consent
- Explain procedure and reassure patient
- Obtain and record written consent for therapeutic aspiration
- Complete WHO surgical safety checklist
Site of insertion and position of patient
- Seat patient on bed or chair leaning slightly forward with arms folded and resting on a pillow placed on a support such as a bed table
- Perform chest ultrasound and mark site
- avoid site where pyoderma or Herpes zoster present
- avoid inferior border of rib
Aseptic technique
- Scrub up and prepare patient's skin
- Check pleural aspiration set ensuring that all parts fit tightly together
Local anaesthetic
- Infiltrate skin with lidocaine using orange needle
- Palpate intercostal space, infiltrate (using green needle) 3 mg/kg (maximum 20 mL) of lidocaine 1% plain to parietal pleura, periosteum of lower rib and into pleural space once fluid aspirated
Pleural aspiration
Diagnostic aspiration only
- Use a green needle and 50 mL syringe
- Aspirate 20-50 mL of fluid and expel into specimen bottles
- Put 3-5 mL fluid from large syringe or biochemistry bottle into 5 mL pre-heparinised syringe for pH measurement
- Expel bubbles from syringe and cap it ready for pH analysis
- to prevent ward blood gas analyser dysfunction, perform wash procedure on analyser after pH measurement
- do not send purulent samples for pH analysis
For relief of symptoms
- Connect 3-way tap with 50 mL syringe attached (already connected in pack) to one end of plastic tubing available in pack or
- Insert pleural aspiration kit needle through chest wall maintaining negative suction
- As soon as fluid aspirated, pull needle out approximately 1 cm and push cannula in further
- Completely remove needle
- Connect other end of plastic tubing to cannula/aspiration kit via three way tap
- Withdraw fluid
- do not aspirate more than 1 L of fluid at one time to avoid re-expansion pulmonary oedema
- If diagnostic sample is needed, aspirate 20-50 mL of fluid into 50 mL syringe and expel into specimen bottles
- connect 5 mL pre-heparinised syringe to 3-way tap
- aspirate 3-5 mL of fluid, expel bubbles from syringe and cap it ready for pH analysis
- to prevent ward blood gas analyser dysfunction, perform wash procedure on analyser after pH measurement
- do not send purulent samples for pH analysis
Troubleshooting
Failure to obtain any fluid
- Needle inserted too low down or too far in
- choose more appropriate site, re-anaesthetise and try again
Needle in diaphragm
- Pleura feels unusually thick and needle moves widely with respiration
- withdraw and adjust angle of approach
Fluid viscous
- Use wider bore needle
No fluid present
- Consider CT to clarify the pleural findings
Aspiration of blood
- Heavily blood-stained fluid can be seen in malignancy and trauma
- If any concerns stop procedure and seek senior advice
Lung unable to re-expand
- Will show as increased pull on the syringe plunger
- Stop aspirating
- if patient distressed, let air into pleural space
SPECIMENS
pH measurement
- Pleural fluid in capped heparinised syringe to measure pH in blood gas analyser
- send to laboratory as soon as possible
Biochemistry
- Send in same sample bag
- 20 mL sterile bottle, and oxalate bottle
- blood in SST bottle (yellow top) and fluoride/oxalate bottle (grey top)
- Use biochemistry form to request pleural fluid profile (ratios of pleural fluid/serum for protein, LDH and glucose)
Histopathology
- Pleural fluid in sterile bottle
- send as much fluid as possible, up to 50 mL
Microbiology
- Send in separate sample bags
- one sterile bottle (20 mL) each for Gram stain, AAFB and TB culture
- two inoculated blood culture bottles for MC&S
Additional pleural fluid tests
- These can be sent in the same bag
- If chylothorax suspected, cholesterol and triglyceride to biochemistry
- if acute pancreatitis or rupture of the oesophagus suspected, amylase (pleural and blood) to biochemistry
- If haemothorax suspected, haematocrit on fluid and blood (purple top) to haematology
- (haematocrit in pleural fluid/peripheral blood haematocrit) >0.5 confirms haemothorax
- If rheumatoid disease suspected, complement to immunology
AFTERCARE
- Apply small adhesive dressing over puncture site
- Chest X-ray following therapeutic pleural tap. Check for pneumothorax
- if present, see Spontaneous pneumothorax guideline
Last reviewed: 2023-12-20