A healthy, fully immunized 4-year-old girl was admitted to hospital after 1 week of fever and respiratory distress, when her chest radiograph showed right-sided pneumonia with large pleural effusion (Appendix 1, Figure S1, available at www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.202468/tab-related-content). She was treated with ceftriaxone and discharged 7 days later after a negative blood culture, with a prescription for 2 weeks of oral amoxicillin–clavulanate. Eight days after discharge she developed a cough and right-sided chest pain and returned to hospital. She appeared well with heart rate 120 beats/min, respiratory rate 20 breaths/min, temperature 36°C and oxygen saturation 97%. We found decreased breath sounds on auscultation of the right chest. Chest radiograph showed a right-sided hydropneumothorax (Figure 1). We admitted her for observation and intravenous ceftriaxone. Daily chest radiographs over 2 days showed improvement, and she remained clinically well. After consulting with respirology and interventional radiology, we decided that procedural intervention or advanced imaging would not provide therapeutic benefit. The patient was discharged from hospital, ultimately receiving a total of 6 weeks of antibiotics and she remained asymptomatic. She also had repeat chest radiographs and clinic appointments booked at 5 days and 2 weeks after discharge. Eight months later, her chest radiograph was completely normal (Appendix 1, Figure S2).
Hydropneumothorax is an uncommon complication of pneumonia characterized by the accumulation of fluid and air within the pleural space, thought to result from an air leak through necrotic lung parenchyma.1 The few pediatric cases reported have been managed with chest tube insertion until resolution, requiring a prolonged hospital stay.1,2 We considered that, because our patient was clinically well, close follow-up was low risk compared to chest tube insertion. Risks of chest tube insertion in children include those associated with sedation and anesthesia, pain, development of bronchopleural fistula, and prolonged hospital stay.3 Chest tubes are clearly indicated for patients with tension hydrothorax, worsening hydropneumothorax, or respiratory distress. This case shows that conservative management with inpatient observation, followed by subsequent close clinical and radiographic outpatient follow-up, can lead to successful resolution of hydropneumothorax complicating pneumonia in otherwise healthy children. Candidates for conservative management are patients who are clinically stable with evidence of improvement on serial chest radiographs and reliable guardians who can support close outpatient follow-up.
Footnotes
Competing interests: None declared.
This article has been peer reviewed.
The authors have obtained consent from the patient’s family.
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