Pleurisy and Pleural
Effusion
S.K. Jindal,
MD (Medicine), FAMS,
FCCP, FNCCP
(Former Professor
& Head, Department of Pulmonary Medicine,
PGIMER, Chandigarh, India)
Medical Director
Jindal Clinics, SCO
21, Sector 20 D, Chandigarh, India 160020
The lungs
are covered on the outer surface by a smooth thin membrane called visceral
pleura which is continuous with a similar membrane – the parietal pleura which
lines the inner surface of the chest wall.
The space between the parietal and the visceral pleura is called the
pleural cavity which in normal circumstances is a potential space only. The opposing surfaces of both the pleural
membranes on the inside of the pleural cavity are moist so as to allow the
smooth expansion of the lungs during breathing.
The pleural
cavity is frequently involved in various diseases in which the fluid can
accumulate and thus cause compression of the lungs. While dry inflammation of the pleurae is
called ‘dry pleurisy’, it is most commonly the ‘wet pleurisy’ or pleurisy with
effusion which happens in different diseases.
The fluid accumulation in the pleural cavity is called ‘pleural
effusion’.
Pleural
effusion presents with a sense of heaviness in the chest or chest pain and
breathlessness. The degree of
breathlessness is directly related to the amount of the fluid in the cavity –
the larger the amount, the greater the breathlessness. There may occur other symptoms such as fever,
general fatigue and malaise etc.
Pleural
effusion can occur in several systemic diseases such as the congestive
heart-failure, liver failure due to cirrhosis or chronic kidney failure. Low serum albumin levels due to malnutrition
or other diseases can also be responsible for pleural effusion. This type of effusion is generally called
‘transudative’ and often responds to the treatment of the underlying
disease. If massive, the fluid may
require to be removed.
Pleural
effusion due to diseases of the pleura and the lungs is generally
‘exudative’. In India, tuberculosis is
the most important cause of pleural effusion.
Other lung infections particularly the pneumonias can also cause pleural
effusion. Pleural effusion can also occur
in various tumours/malignancies of the lungs and/or pleurae. Some other important causes include the
connective tissue disorders such as systemic lupus erythematosis and rheumatoid
arthritis. Pulmonary thromboembolism
i.e. blood clots in the pulmonary arteries can also cause pleural effusion.
Pleural
effusion due to malignancies, thromboembolism and occasionally due to other
causes may frequently contain blood.
Trauma to the chest can also cause bloody pleural effusion i. e.
haemothorax. Pus in the pleural cavity
called pyothorax (or empyema) can occur following pneumonias or lung abscess.
Diagnosis of
pleural effusion, suspected on clinical examination, is confirmed on chest
x-ray and/or ultrasound examination.
Chest CT scan is required to look into the details of pleural cavity and
the lungs for the underlying cause.
Fluid aspiration is almost always essential. The various pleural fluid investigations will
help to find the cause of effusion.
Management
of pleural effusion consists of fluid aspiration and treatment for the
underlying cause (such as tuberculosis or malignancies). Management of emphysema requires chest-tube
drainage and a relatively prolonged antibiotic therapy. Complicated effusions require to be handled
by specialists with skill and expertise.
Thoracoscopic and surgical intervention may be required for both the
diagnosis and the therapy.
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