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pleurodesis; chemical pleurodesis

Indications: 1) recurrent pneumothorax 2) recurrent pleural effusion Procedure: 1) pleural instillation of sclerosing agent (sclerotherapy) through a chest tube 2) sclerosing agent mixed in 30 mL of saline a) tetracycline (15 mg/kg) b) doxycycline (10 mg/kg) c) minocycline (5 mg/kg) d) bleomycin e) talc (2.5-10 g) - 90% effective 3) surgical pleurodesis may be effective in closing pleural space when chemical agents fail Management: - NSAIDs vs opiates results in no significant difference in pain scores but is associated with more rescue medication - placement of smaller 12F chest tubes vs 24F chest tubes is associated with a statistically significant but clinically modest reduction in pain but fails to meet noninferiority criteria for pleurodesis efficacy [3]

Related

pleural effusion pneumothorax

Specific

thorascopy with pleurodesis

General

cardiothoracic surgery sclerotherapy (phlebosclerosis)

References

  1. Mayo Internal Medicine Board Review, 1998-99, Prakash UBS (ed) Lippincott-Raven, Philadelphia, 1998, pg 773
  2. Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 11, 17, American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 1998, 2015
  3. Rahman NM et al Effect of Opioids vs NSAIDs and Larger vs Smaller Chest Tube Size on Pain Control and Pleurodesis Efficacy Among Patients With Malignant Pleural Effusion: The TIME1 Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA. 2015 Dec 22-29;314(24):2641-53 PMID: 26720026