INDICATIONS

  • Diagnosis
  • To relieve symptoms

CONTRAINDICATIONS

  • All relative. Discuss with consultant
  • Severe bullous emphysema or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
  • Impaired blood clotting

CONSIDERATIONS

  • If not competent in procedure, organise supervision by a clinician experienced in the procedure 

Use of ultrasound

  • Use ultrasound to guide aspiration

EQUIPMENT

  • Cleansing pack
  • Gloves
  • Gown
  • Lidocaine 1% plain maximum 20 mL
  • 5 mL and 10 mL plastic syringes

Relief of symptoms (removal of large amounts of fluid)

  • Pleural aspiration pack (if available)
    • otherwise use cannula with 3-way tap and 50 mL syringe

Diagnostic aspiration only

  • Green needle and 50 mL syringe

Specimen bottles

Fluid

  • 3 sterile bottles (20 mL) for microbiology, biochemistry and cytology
  • Oxalate bottle for glucose
  • 2 blood culture bottles

Blood

  • SST bottle (yellow top) for serum LDH and protein
  • Fluoride/oxalate bottle (grey top) for glucose

For pH measurement:

  • Plastic syringe: cap as used for blood gas measurement
  • Unfractionated heparin 1000 units/mL
  • Wash 5 mL syringe with unfractionated heparin
  • Expel unfractionated heparin, leaving unfractionated heparin-coated syringe
  • Cap syringe

PROCEDURE

  • Review chest X-ray (PA +/- lateral if available)
  • Take blood specimens 

Consent

Site of insertion and position of patient

  • Seat patient on bed or chair leaning slightly forward with arms folded and resting on a pillow placed on a support such as a bed table
  • Perform chest ultrasound and mark site
    • avoid site where pyoderma or Herpes zoster present
    • avoid inferior border of rib

Aseptic technique

  • Scrub up and prepare patient's skin
  • Check pleural aspiration set ensuring that all parts fit tightly together

Local anaesthetic

  • Infiltrate skin with lidocaine using orange needle
  • Palpate intercostal space, infiltrate (using green needle) 3 mg/kg (maximum 20 mL) of lidocaine 1% plain to parietal pleura, periosteum of lower rib and into pleural space once fluid aspirated

Pleural aspiration

Diagnostic aspiration only

  • Use a green needle and 50 mL syringe
  • Aspirate 20–50 mL of fluid and expel into specimen bottles
  • Put 3–5 mL fluid from large syringe or biochemistry bottle into 5 mL pre-heparinised syringe for pH measurement
  • Expel bubbles from syringe and cap it ready for pH analysis
    • to prevent ward blood gas analyser dysfunction, perform wash procedure on analyser after pH measurement
    • do not send purulent samples for pH analysis

For relief of symptoms

  • Connect 3-way tap with 50 mL syringe attached (already connected in pack) to one end of plastic tubing available in pack or
  • Insert pleural aspiration kit needle through chest wall maintaining negative suction
  • As soon as fluid aspirated, pull needle out approximately 1 cm and push cannula in further
  • Completely remove needle
  • Connect other end of plastic tubing to cannula/aspiration kit via three way tap
  • Withdraw fluid
    • do not aspirate more than 1 L of fluid at one time to avoid re-expansion pulmonary oedema
  • If diagnostic sample is needed, aspirate 20–50 mL of fluid into 50 mL syringe and expel into specimen bottles
    • connect 5 mL pre-heparinised syringe to 3-way tap
    • aspirate 3–5 mL of fluid, expel bubbles from syringe and cap it ready for pH analysis
    • to prevent ward blood gas analyser dysfunction, perform wash procedure on analyser after pH measurement
    • do not send purulent samples for pH analysis

Troubleshooting

Failure to obtain any fluid

  • Needle inserted too low down or too far in
    • choose more appropriate site, re-anaesthetise and try again

Needle in diaphragm

  • Pleura feels unusually thick and needle moves widely with respiration
    • withdraw and adjust angle of approach

Fluid viscous

  • Use wider bore needle

No fluid present

  • Consider CT to clarify the pleural findings 

Aspiration of blood

  • Heavily blood-stained fluid can be seen in malignancy and trauma
  • If any concerns stop procedure and seek senior advice 

Lung unable to re-expand

  • Will show as increased pull on the syringe plunger
  • Stop aspirating
    • if patient distressed, let air into pleural space

SPECIMENS

pH measurement

  • Pleural fluid in capped heparinised syringe to measure pH in blood gas analyser
    • send to laboratory as soon as possible

Biochemistry

  • Send in same sample bag
    • 20 mL sterile bottle, and oxalate bottle
    • blood in SST bottle (yellow top) and fluoride/oxalate bottle (grey top)
  • Use biochemistry form to request pleural fluid profile (ratios of pleural fluid/serum for protein, LDH and glucose)

Histopathology

  • Pleural fluid in sterile bottle
    • send as much fluid as possible, up to 50 mL

Microbiology

  • Send in separate sample bags
    • one sterile bottle (20 mL) each for Gram stain, AAFB and TB culture
    • two inoculated blood culture bottles for MC&S

Additional pleural fluid tests

  • These can be sent in the same bag
  • If chylothorax suspected, cholesterol and triglyceride to biochemistry
  • if acute pancreatitis or rupture of the oesophagus suspected, amylase (pleural and blood) to biochemistry
  • If haemothorax suspected, haematocrit on fluid and blood (purple top) to haematology
    • (haematocrit in pleural fluid/peripheral blood haematocrit) >0.5 confirms haemothorax
  • If rheumatoid disease suspected, complement to immunology

AFTERCARE

  • Apply small adhesive dressing over puncture site
  • Chest X-ray following therapeutic pleural tap. Check for pneumothorax

© 2022 The Bedside Clinical Guidelines Partnership.

Created by University Hospital North Midlands and Keele University School of Computing and Mathematics.

Research and development team: James Mitchell, Ed de Quincey, Charles Pantin, Naveed Mustfa