Spontaneous pneumomediastinum during labour is a rare, usually benign and self-limiting condition. It often presents with chest or neck pain and surgical emphysema. The latter sign is easy to demonstrate but often missed during clinical assessment if the condition is not included in the differential diagnosis of chest pain and dyspnoea in peripartum. The authors describe a case of 20-year-old primigravida who developed surgical emphysema following prolonged vaginal delivery. The chest x-ray revealed pneumomediastinum, and small left apical pneumothorax. She was investigated with CT of the chest and contrast swallow, both of which excluded oesophageal perforation. The management was conservative and she made a complete recovery. Spontaneous oesophageal rupture is a potential cause of pneumomediastinum and leads to high morbidity and mortality if not diagnosed early. However, it is extremely uncommon in labour, especially without a preceding history of vomiting. Unless a strong clinical suspicious exists, routine investigations and or treatment of suspected oesophageal perforation are unnecessary.
Accurate arterial blood gas (ABG) analysis is essential in the management of patients with hypercapnic respiratory failure, but repeated sampling requires technical expertise and is painful. Missed sampling is common and has a negative impact on patient care. A newer venous to arterial conversion method (v-TAC, Roche) uses mathematical models of acid-base chemistry, a venous blood gas sample and peripheral blood oxygen saturation to calculate arterial acid-base status. It has the potential to replace routine ABG sampling for selected patient cohorts. The aim of this study was to compare v-TAC with ABG, capillary and venous sampling in a patient cohort referred to start non-invasive ventilation (NIV).