Journal of Acute Care Surgery (Mar 2023)

Delayed Chylothorax Following Blunt Chest Trauma Treated with Repeated Lymphangiography: A Case Presentation

  • Gayoung Kim,
  • Dongsub Noh,
  • Bong Man Kim,
  • Yoonjung Heo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17479/jacs.2023.13.1.39
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 39 – 42

Abstract

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Chylothorax is mostly iatrogenic, with blunt chest trauma being a rare cause. Treatment depends on the volume of drainage. Specifically, conservative treatment, such as total parenteral nutrition and pleural drainage, is performed in cases of low daily output ( 1–1.5 L/day) are candidates for surgical or radiological intervention. We present a case of delayed-onset chylothorax after blunt trauma caused by thoracic spine fractures, in which persistent chylothorax was successfully managed with repeated lymphangiography with lipiodol when other treatment modalities failed. The case is peculiar in that the chylothorax occurred 40 days after the initial traumatic event and was treated with lipiodol injection, despite maintaining moderate to high daily output.

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