Sure; some of our post-trauma patients live on vents for months but their lung problems improve much faster. So we pull the tube. Worst case, we put a new one in. Doesn't happen that often.
How many of you put the chest tube to water seal in post-op patients with a continued air leak. For whatever reason our surgical department isn't excited about taking the CT off suction with an air leak. Seems to me that a BPF may resolve more quickly if on waterseal >> suction.
I am not ******ed, I would not pull a chest tube in a vented patient. However if there is no air leak it seems physiologically speaking it would be possible. Anyone hear of someone pulling a chest tube on a vented patient?
A lot of time they would do better on water seal (assuming the lung is up), but a lot of what people do is based on the voodoo you were taught rather than current literature.Im saying you have a non-intubated post-op thoracic patient who has a continued air leak and has been on wall suction which if there is a BPF the suction is keeping it open.
Really this could apply to anyone, say a trauma patient with an air leak on suction, but no PTX on cxr. Why not go to water seal, despite the air leak, this way you are no longer creating a negative intraplueral pressure and stenting open that BPF, and potentially the air leak will cease sooner?
Yes you can clamp it, but I'm saying you aren't ready to pull the tube because of an air leak, you are on suction for the last couple of days, why not switch over to water seal despite the continued leak? A tension cannot develop because you still have a tube in the pleural space and any positive pressure that develops will come out (assuming a non-kinked properly placed CT) via the water seal.
Im saying you have a non-intubated post-op thoracic patient who has a continued air leak and has been on wall suction which if there is a BPF the suction is keeping it open.
Really this could apply to anyone, say a trauma patient with an air leak on suction, but no PTX on cxr. Why not go to water seal, despite the air leak, this way you are no longer creating a negative intraplueral pressure and stenting open that BPF, and potentially the air leak will cease sooner?
Yes you can clamp it, but I'm saying you aren't ready to pull the tube because of an air leak, you are on suction for the last couple of days, why not switch over to water seal despite the continued leak? A tension cannot develop because you still have a tube in the pleural space and any positive pressure that develops will come out (assuming a non-kinked properly placed CT) via the water seal.
How many of you put the chest tube to water seal in post-op patients with a continued air leak. For whatever reason our surgical department isn't excited about taking the CT off suction with an air leak. Seems to me that a BPF may resolve more quickly if on waterseal >> suction.
I wouldn't say the way they do it at your place is uncommon at all.ok so this nonsense at my shop of keeping on suction until the leak is gone (even if its a small leak) is out of habit not practiced most other places? i did a lit search there is amazingly little data on this small 60 person rct in chest 10 years ago ( meta-analysis with 600 pts?)and some retrospective stuff with expert opinion. seems physiologically water seal would be superior for most leaks and get the tube out faster after early suction immediately post-op/placement.