Hemothorax is a collection of blood in the space between the chest wall and the lung (the pleural cavity).
A pneumothorax is a pocket of air in the chest cavity, and a hemothorax is a pocket of blood.
Bilateral hemothorax refers to the accumulation of blood in the pleural cavities on both sides of the chest. It is often a result of trauma or injury to the chest, leading to bleeding into the pleural space. This condition can lead to respiratory distress and requires urgent medical attention.
The presence of blood in the chest cavity is called hemothorax. It can occur due to trauma, surgery, or underlying medical conditions such as lung cancer or blood clotting disorders. Symptoms may include chest pain, difficulty breathing, and low blood pressure. Treatment typically involves draining the blood from the chest cavity to relieve symptoms and prevent complications.
The medical term for the condition of blood in the chest cavity is hemothorax. This condition may result from trauma.
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Hemothorax is an accumulation of blood in the pleural cavity surrounding the lungs. Hemopericardium is blood in the pericardial sac or space surrounding the heart. Hemomediastinum is blood in the mediastinum, which is the space in which the bronchi and aorta are found.
32551 - chest tube placement 860.2 - traumatic hemothorax 511.89 - spontaneous hemothroax
The suffix would be thorax. The chest
Blood accumulates in the pleural cavity when hemothorax is diagnosed. This can result from trauma, surgery, or certain medical conditions where blood leaks from blood vessels into the pleural space, causing difficulty in breathing and chest pain. Treatment may involve drainage of the blood to relieve symptoms and prevent complications.
Hemothorax (hee-moh-THOH-racks)hem/o means blood , and -thorax means chestThe accumulation of blood in the pleural cavity in commonly referred to as a Hemothorax, as opposed to air build up in the cavity called a pneuomothorax. Typically, to correct a hemothorax one needs the insertion of a chest tube and the blood must be drained from the cavity.It is usually caused from an injury, especially blunt trauma. It can also occur in patients who suffer a pulmonary infarction (death of a section of lung), patients who have had a type of chest surgery, patients with lung or pleural cancer, etc. Rarely, a blood vessel ruptures into the pleural space when no injury has occurred, or a bulging area in the aorta (aortic aneurysm) leaks blood into the pleural space.
No, it is not recommended to clamp a chest tube as it can lead to a potentially dangerous increase in pressure inside the chest cavity, causing a tension pneumothorax or hemothorax. It is important to follow medical protocol and guidelines for managing chest tubes.