| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5601213 | Chest | 2006 | 12 Pages | 
Abstract
												Unintentional pneumothoraces cannot be prevented by monitoring for symptoms or excessively negative pressure. These pneumothoraces were drainage related rather than due to penetrating lung trauma or external air introduction. We speculate that unintentional pneumothoraces are caused by transient, parenchymal-pleural fistulae caused by nonuniform stress distribution over the visceral pleura that develop during large-volume drainage if the lung cannot conform to the shape of the thoracic cavity in some patients with unexpandable lung. These fistulae appear to be pressure dependent, and the resulting pneumothoraces rarely require treatment. Drainage-related pneumothorax is an unavoidable complication of ultrasound-guided thoracentesis and appears to account for the vast majority of pneumothoraces occurring in a procedure service.
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											Authors
												Heidecker MD, Huggins MD, Sahn MD, FCCP, Doelken MD, FCCP, 
											