[The Scenario]
"Alright, let’s set the scene. You’re in the trauma bay when EMS rushes in with a 30-year-old male motorcyclistinvolved in a high-speed collision with a truck. He was not wearing a helmet, and his bike was found crushed beneath the truck's rear axle.
The patient is struggling to breathe and has a hoarse voice. He’s coughing up bright red blood. You quickly assess his vitals:
On physical exam, you immediately notice some red flags:
First thought? Maybe a tension pneumothorax, so you insert a chest tube on the left. But something’s off—your patient barely improves, and there’s a huge, persistent air leak in the chest tube. Now what? This is where a high-yield Step 2 CK moment kicks in."
[Key Exam Clue: Persistent Air Leak]
"When a trauma patient has a chest tube placed for pneumothorax, but there’s a persistent air leak, you should immediately suspect tracheobronchial injury.
Why? Because there’s a major airway tear, allowing air to continuously escape into the pleural space with every breath. That’s why your chest tube keeps bubbling."
[Why Do Tracheobronchial Injuries Happen?]
"These injuries typically occur in high-energy blunt trauma—think motor vehicle accidents, falls from height, or a motorcycle crash like this case.
What’s happening inside?
[How to Diagnose Tracheobronchial Injury on Step 2 CK]
"So, how do you confirm your suspicion?
First, let’s talk imaging:
But what’s the gold standard test?
[Management: What’s the Next Best Step?]
"Alright, so you’ve got your persistent air leak and you suspect tracheobronchial injury. What’s the plan?
[Step 2 CK Exam Strategy]
"Let’s talk test-taking strategy.
If you see:
What’s the next best step? Bronchoscopy.
Now, let’s go over some common exam traps:
❌ Repeat chest X-ray → Won’t show the airway tear.
❌ Additional chest tube → Won’t fix the air leak.
❌ Talc pleurodesis → That’s for recurrent spontaneous pneumothorax, not trauma.
Stay focused on bronchoscopy for diagnosis and surgery for definitive treatment."
[Key Takeaways]
"Let’s wrap this up with three high-yield pearls to lock this in for Step 2 CK:
Master these concepts, and you’ll crush any tracheobronchial injury question on your exam!"