management
Last edited 07/2020
- accurate assessment of the size of the effusion and, where necessary, loculations using ultrasound or CT scanning
- early diagnostic pleural aspiration, to assess fluid appearance, bacteriology and biochemistry
- antibiotic therapy - depends on the bacteriology of the aspirated fluid; often requires metronidazole because organisms may not be revealed by culture
- pleural fluid is drained - if this is not possible then surgery is indicated (surgical evacuation and lung decortication so that it may be fully expanded and so obliterate the pleural space)
- intrapleural fibrinolytic therapy - a systematic review stated " with complicated infective pleural effusion or empyema, intrapleural fibrinolytic therapy was associated with a reduction in the requirement for surgical intervention and overall treatment failure but with no evidence of change in mortality" (2)
- consider the possibility of tuberculosis
Reference:
- Drug and Therapeutics Bulletin 2006; 44 (3): 17-20.
- Altmann ES et al. Intra-pleural fibrinolytic therapy versus placebo, or a different fibrinolytic agent, in the treatment of adult parapneumonic effusions and empyema. Cochrane Systematic Review October 2019