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Pleural Effusion
Post your experienceSee others (2 there)
The lungs are covered by a thin serous layer (the visceral pleura). The pleura is then reflected onto the chest wall and pericardium (the parietal pleura).1 The lung hila 'connect' the visceral and parietal pleura. There is normally a small amount of fluid in the 'pleural space' between the parietal and visceral pleura which lubricates movement between them. A pleural effusion is when the volume of this fluid is substantially greater than normal.
- When a pleural effusion is present, it is caused by disease which can be pulmonary, pleural or extrapulmonary.
- Effusions are usually classified as either transudates or exudates. However, blood (haemothorax), pus (empyema) or chyle (chylothorax) can also accumulate in the pleural space.
- A transudative pleural effusion occurs when there is disruption of the hydrostatic and oncotic forces operating across the pleural membranes.
- An exudative pleural effusion occurs when there is increased permeability of the pleural surface and/or capillaries, usually as a result of inflammation.
- Impaired lymphatic drainage and abnormal sites of entry (for example passage of fluid across the diaphragm in people with ascites) can also be underlying causes of pleural effusions.2
Causes of transudates3
Most common causes:
- Left ventricular failure
- Cirrhosis
- Hypoalbuminaemia
- Peritoneal dialysis
Less common causes:
- Hypothyroidism
- Nephrotic syndrome
- Mitral stenosis
- Pulmonary embolism (tends to produce a comparatively small effusion but disproportionate dyspnoea and pleuritic pain; 80% are exudates, 20% are transudates)
Rare causes:
- Superior vena cava obstruction (usually due to lung cancer)
- Constrictive pericarditis
- Ovarian hyperstimulation
- Meig's syndrome (benign ovarian tumour, ascites and pleural effusion)
Causes of exudates3
Common causes:
- Malignancy (most commonly lung cancer in men and breast cancer in women; large unilateral pleural effusions are most commonly due to malignancy)4,5
- Pneumonia
Less common causes:
- Pulmonary infarction (usually results from embolism)
- Autoimmune disease, especially rheumatoid arthritis
- Asbestos exposure
- Pancreatitis
- Complication of acute myocardial infarction (Dressler's syndrome)
- Tuberculosis
Rare causes:
- Yellow nail syndrome (yellow nails, lymphoedema, pleural effusion and bronchiectasis)2
- Adverse drug reactions (commonest are methotrexate, amiodarone, nitrofurantoin and phenytoin)
- Fungal infections
Causes of chylothorax3
This is the presence of chyle in the pleural space. It usually occurs because of disruption of the thoracic duct. Causes include:
- Neoplasm: lymphoma, metastatic carcinoma
- Trauma: operative and penetrating injuries
- Tuberculosis, sarcoidosis, cirrhosis, amyloidosis
Causes of pseudochylothorax3
This is the accumulation of cholesterol crystals in a longstanding pleural effusion. Causes include:
- Tuberculosis
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Poorly treated empyema
- An effusion has to be quite large before it causes any symptoms. Most malignant effusions are symptomatic.
- Shortness of breath, especially on exertion, is a common feature.
- There may be cough and pain (which may be pleuritic).
- Look for other features in the history: loss of weight may suggest malignancy; smoking history and haemoptysis can suggest lung cancer; there may be a history of another malignancy.
- Note past medical history.
- Note drug history.
- Note occupational history (asbestos exposure).
See Respiratory System - History and Exam.
If the effusion is small, there may be no abnormality on examination.
- Inspection: is there evidence of loss of weight or underlying malignancy? Nicotine staining on the fingers? Finger clubbing? Rheumatoid changes in the hands? Is the patient dyspnoeic? Are accessory muscles of respiration being used? If the effusion is unilateral and large there will be reduced movement on that side of the chest.
- Palpation: chest expansion is reduced on the side of the effusion. Feel for deviation of the trachea. With a large unilateral effusion it is displaced away from the lesion. If there is associated collapse, the trachea is deviated towards the lesion. Mediastinal shift suggests an effusion that is in excess of a litre. There may be decreased tactile vocal fremitus.
- Percussion: an effusion will cause stony dullness on percussion. Laterally, it may rise up towards the axilla.
- Auscultation: breath sounds are diminished or absent over an effusion. Vocal resonance is lost over a pleural effusion except at its upper surface (this is called aegophony; it sounds like a goat bleating).
Chest X-ray: this is the first investigation if a pleural effusion is suspected clinically; both PA and lateral views are needed. About 200 ml of fluid is required to be visible on a PA view but just 50 ml will cause costo-phrenic blunting on a lateral view.6 Bilateral effusions with an enlarged heart shadow are commonly caused by congestive cardiac failure. Pleural plaques and calcifications may be seen suggesting history of asbestos exposure.
Unilateral pleural effusion
The British Thoracic Society suggests a diagnostic algorithm for the investigation of a unilateral pleural effusion.3 This is outlined below:
- Does the clinical picture suggest a transudate (e.g. LVF, hypoalbuminaemia, dialysis)? It is often possible to identify transudative effusions by clinical assessment alone.
- If YES, treat the cause. This may result in resolution. If it doesn't, continue with pleural aspiration as below.
- If NO, perform pleural aspiration. (Please refer to the separate article entitled 'Pleural Effusion Aspiration'). Ultrasound guided pleural aspiration may be needed if the effusion is small or loculated.
- Pleural aspiration (thoracentesis): send aspirated fluid for cytology; protein; LDH; pH; Gram stain, culture and sensitivity; AAFB stains and culture.
- Do you suspect an empyema, chylothorax or haemothorax (because of the appearance/odour of the fluid)?
- If YES, perform additional pleural fluid tests:
- For chylothorax: cholesterol and triglyceride levels; centrifuge; presence of cholesterol crystals and chylomicrons
- For haemothorax: haematocrit
- For empyema: centrifuge
- If YES, perform additional pleural fluid tests:
- Perform other tests as appropriate: e.g. blood tests (ESR, CRP, albumin, amylase, thyroid function tests, blood culture). D dimer and spiral CT are the best investigations if pulmonary embolism is suspected.
- Wait for the results of the pleural aspiration:
- If the fluid analysis and chemical features have not given a diagnosis, referral to a chest physician should be made. They can then commence further investigations including:
- CT thorax ± abdomen: usually carried out with contrast enhancement. This should be done before the effusion is drained and has a high sensitivity for malignant pleural disease.5 It can also show abdominal malignancy.
- Pleural biopsy: samples should be sent for histology and TB culture; in mesothelioma, the biopsy site should be irradiated to stop biopsy site invasion by tumour. This can either be blind biopsy using a Abram's needle, CT guided biopsy or biopsy performed at the time of thoracoscopy.
- Repeat pleural aspiration: special tests for rheumatoid disease (glucose and complement) and pancreatitis (amylase) may also be added.
- Thoracoscopy: this allows direct visualisation of the pleura and can allow tissue diagnosis, fluid drainage and pleurodesis. It can be performed under conscious sedation.
- Bronchoscopy: BTS guidelines suggest that this investigation should be reserved for patients whose radiology suggests a mass or loss of volume or when there is a history of haemoptysis or possible foreign body aspiration.
- If the fluid analysis and chemical features have not given a diagnosis, referral to a chest physician should be made. They can then commence further investigations including:
Bilateral pleural effusion
The British Thoracic Society suggest that 'aspiration should not be performed for bilateral effusions in a clinical setting strongly suggestive of a pleural transudate, unless there are atypical features or they fail to respond to therapy'.3
- Transudate or exudate: the pleural protein content usually differentiates between a transudative and an exudative effusion.
If the pleural fluid protein is between 25 and 35g/l, Light's criteria should be applied to accurately differentiate transudates and exudates.3Exudates have a protein level of > 30g/l; transudates have a protein level of < 30g/l.
Light's criteria state that the pleural fluid is an exudate if one or more of the following criteria are met:3 - Pleural fluid protein divided by serum protein > 0.5
- Pleural fluid LDH divided by serum LDH > 0.6
- Pleural fluid LDH more than two-thirds the upper limits of normal serum LDH
- Bloody pleural fluid: bloody pleural fluid can be caused by:
- Malignancy
- Pulmonary embolus with infarction
- Trauma
- Benign asbestos pleural effusions
- Post-cardiac injury syndrome
- Pleural fluid haematocrit: if the pleural fluid is bloody, the haematocrit of the fluid should be measured. If the haematocrit of the pleural fluid is more than half of the patient's peripheral blood haematocrit, the patient has a haemothorax. If the haematocrit of the pleural fluid is < 1%, the blood in the pleural fluid is not significant.7
- pH: pleural pH is mainly used to identify pleural infection. Normal pleural pH is about 7.6; a pH of < 7.2 with a normal blood pH is found in:
- Pleural infection and empyema
- Rheumatoid disease and SLE
- TB
- Malignancy
- Oesophageal rupture
- Cytology: malignant effusions are diagnosed by pleural fluid cytology alone in only 60% of cases.3 If the first pleural fluid cytology specimen is negative, it should be repeated.
- Cholesterol, triglycerides, cholesterol crystals and chylomicrons
- Chylothorax usually has a triglyceride level > 1.24 mmol/l, cholesterol < 5.18 mmol/l, no cholesterol crystals and the presence of chylomicrons.
- Pseudochylothorax has a triglyceride level < 0.56 mmol/l, cholesterol level > 5.18 mmol/l, no chylomicrons and the presence of cholesterol crystals.
- Glucose: causes of low pleural glucose levels (< 3.3 mmol/l) are:
- Empyema
- Rheumatoid disease
- SLE
- TB
- Malignancy
- Oesophageal rupture
- Differential white cell counts: pleural lymphocytosis is common in malignancy and TB.
- Management should be aimed at the underlying disease. If a transudate is confirmed, aspiration should be avoided.
- Small effusions that are not causing respiratory embarrassment may be managed by observation.
- Tapping the fluid can give symptomatic relief as well as being useful for diagnosis but the effusion is likely to re-form. Repeated tapping may be used in palliative care.
- No more than 1.5 litres (some say 1 litre) should be removed at a single procedure as fluid shifts can result in pulmonary oedema.
- In malignant effusions, if no attempt is made at pleurodesis, nearly all have recurred within a month.
- A chest drain can also be inserted for controlled drainage of the effusion. The drain can be removed if/when the underlying disease has been treated. Chest drains are often needed for the management of empyema and haemothorax.
- Long-term indwelling pleural drainage may be used in some patients with malignant effusions.
- Pleurectomy is also used in some cases of malignant effusion when other treatment options have failed.
- Surgically implanted pleuroperitoneal shunts are occasionally used for the treatment of malignant effusions and chylothorax.
Pleurodesis
- This is injection of a sclerosant to cause adhesion of the visceral and parietal pleura and help to prevent re-accumulation of the effusion. Sclerosing agents that are commonly used include tetracycline, sterile talc and bleomycin.
- It is most often used in the management of recurrent malignant effusions.
- For more detail on how to carry out the procedure, please refer to the British Thoracic Society guidelines for the management of malignant pleural effusions.
- This is dependent on the cause of the effusion.
- If the cause is malignancy, the outlook is generally very poor.
Document references
- Peek GJ, Morcos S, Cooper G; The pleural cavity. BMJ. 2000 May 13;320(7245):1318-21.
- Pleural disease. Chapter 4.36. Oxford Textbook of Medicine 4th edition.
- BTS guidelines for the investigation of a unilateral pleural effusion in adults, British Thoracic Society (2005)
- BTS guidelines for the management of a malignant pleural effusion, British Thoracic Society (2003)
- Rahman NM, Davies RJ, Gleeson FV; Investigating suspected malignant pleural effusion. BMJ. 2007 Jan 27;334(7586):206-7.
- Blackmore CC, Black WC, Dallas RV, et al; Pleural fluid volume estimation: a chest radiograph prediction rule. Acad Radiol. 1996 Feb;3(2):103-9. [abstract]
- Light RW, Erozan YS, Ball WC Jr; Cells in pleural fluid. Their value in differential diagnosis. Arch Intern Med. 1973 Dec;132(6):854-60.
Internet and further reading
- Pneumotox on line; The Drug-Induced Lung Diseases. Gives a list of drugs that can cause pleural effusion. Accessed on-line December 2007.
DocID: 2621
Document Version: 22
DocRef: bgp638
Last Updated: 14 Jan 2008
Review Date: 13 Jan 2010
The authors and editors of this article are employed to create accurate and up to date content reflecting reliable research evidence, guidance and best clinical practice. They are free from any commercial conflicts of interest. Find out more about updating.
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