Pleuritis

Background

  • Pleuritis (pleurisy) is inflammation of the parietal pleura, producing characteristic pleuritic chest pain[1]
  • Most often follows a viral illness (viral pleuritis is the most common cause)
  • Pleuritis is a diagnosis of exclusion — must rule out life-threatening causes of pleuritic chest pain before attributing symptoms to benign pleurisy
  • Key EM concern: pulmonary embolism, pneumonia, pericarditis, and pneumothorax all cause pleuritic chest pain and must be considered

Clinical Features

History

  • Sharp, well-localized chest pain
  • Worse with respiration, coughing, sneezing, or movement
  • May be positional (worse lying flat, better sitting forward — though this is more classic for pericarditis)
  • May complain of shortness of breath secondary to splinting from pain
  • Recent viral illness (prodromal URI symptoms suggest viral pleuritis)
  • Risk factors for PE: immobility, OCP use, recent surgery, malignancy, prior DVT/PE
  • Fever (pneumonia, empyema, TB)

Physical Exam

  • Pleural friction rub (coarse, grating sound heard during respiration) — pathognomonic but not always present
  • Decreased breath sounds (associated effusion)
  • Splinting (shallow breaths to minimize pain)
  • Point tenderness may be present (but also consider musculoskeletal causes)
  • Assess for signs of underlying cause: fever, tachycardia, hypoxia, unilateral leg swelling

Red Flags

  • Hypoxia or tachycardia (PE, large effusion, pneumonia)
  • Hemodynamic instability (massive PE, tension pneumothorax)
  • Unilateral leg swelling (DVT → PE)
  • Fever + productive cough (pneumonia, empyema)
  • Recent malignancy (malignant effusion)
  • Diffuse ST changes on ECG (pericarditis vs. ACS)
  • Absent breath sounds (pneumothorax)

Differential Diagnosis

Must Rule Out

Other Causes of Pleuritic Pain

Chest pain

Critical

Emergent

Nonemergent

Evaluation

Initial

  • ECG: rule out MI, pericarditis (diffuse ST elevation with PR depression)
  • CXR: pneumonia, effusion, pneumothorax, widened mediastinum
  • Pulse oximetry

Laboratory

  • CBC, BMP
  • Troponin if any concern for ACS or myocarditis
  • D-dimer if PE is on the differential and patient is low-to-moderate risk (use Wells criteria or PERC rule)
  • ESR, CRP if inflammatory/autoimmune process suspected
  • Consider BNP if effusion or heart failure suspected

Advanced Imaging

  • CT angiography (CTA chest): if PE suspected — low threshold to obtain in patients with risk factors
  • CT chest without contrast: if concern for parenchymal disease, effusion characterization
  • Bedside POCUS: evaluate for pleural effusion, pneumothorax, pericardial effusion, RV strain (PE)
  • Echocardiography: if pericarditis or myocarditis suspected

Diagnosis

  • Viral pleuritis is a clinical diagnosis made after excluding dangerous causes
  • Young, otherwise healthy patient with recent viral illness and no red flags may need only ECG and CXR

Management

Symptomatic Treatment

  • NSAIDs are first-line treatment
    • Indomethacin 25-50mg TID (most studied agent for pleurisy)
    • Ibuprofen 600-800mg TID is a reasonable alternative
    • Ketorolac 15-30mg IV for acute pain relief in ED
  • Acetaminophen as adjunct
  • Avoid opioids if possible (respiratory depression can worsen splinting)
  • Short course of oral corticosteroids may be considered for refractory cases

Treat Underlying Cause

  • PE → anticoagulation
  • Pneumonia → antibiotics
  • Pericarditis → NSAIDs + colchicine
  • Empyema → antibiotics + drainage
  • Pneumothorax → observation or chest tube

Disposition

Admit

  • Identified underlying cause requiring inpatient management (PE, pneumonia, empyema)
  • Large pleural effusion
  • Hypoxia
  • Hemodynamic instability

Discharge

  • Viral pleuritis with normal workup, adequate pain control, and ability to breathe comfortably
  • Prescribe NSAIDs for 1-2 weeks
  • Follow-up with PCP in 1-2 weeks if symptoms not improving
  • Return precautions: worsening pain, shortness of breath, fever, coughing blood, leg swelling, lightheadedness

See Also

External Links

References

  1. Kass SM, Williams PM, Reamy BV. Pleurisy. Am Fam Physician. 2007;75(9):1357-1364.