Think ultrasound when evaluating for pneumothorax.
نویسنده
چکیده
hen evaluating a patient with hypoxia, dyspnea, or pleurisy, the differential diagnosis a clinician generates oftentimes includes ruling in or ruling out pneumothorax. Indeed, the clinical scenarios in which this diagnosis is important to consider are almost too numerous to list: a patient begins coughing just after a difficult attempt at central line placement; ventilator setting alarms start to go off and oxygen saturations drop in a patient with obstructive pulmonary disease; a young healthy person presents to the emergency department with dyspnea and pleurisy; a trauma patient presents with hypotension; or a patient becomes short of breath immediately after a diagnostic or therapeutic thoracentesis. Moreover, in settings in which radiography is not available such as office practices and in remote settings, thoracic sonography for pneumothorax can be especially helpful. In these clinical scenarios a quick diagnostic imaging test to rule in or rule out pneumo thorax not only facilitates the patient’s treatment when its findings are positive but also helps eliminate this diagnosis from the differential. In some respects the latter is even more crucial because it allows the care team to move on to treat the true source of dyspnea and not perform unnecessary therapeutic maneuvers but rather focus on accurate treatment. As has been well described, supine chest radiographs are notoriously unreliable in making the diagnosis of pneumothorax, and sensitivity values of 25% to 75% have been reported.1 This situation occurs largely because layering air in the supine patient can be distributed evenly over the anterior chest and therefore can be invisible on supine radiographs. Even upright chest radiography can be challenging, however, because lines, tubes, and other folds can hide subtle pleural line abnormalities. Although chest computed tomography is quite accurate, it involves moving potentially unstable patients to a less monitored environment; it involves radiation exposure; and its increased cost makes it an inefficient screening tool. Sonography is portable, can be performed at the bedside, and has no risk associated with repeated measures as clinical scenarios change. These advantages can make it less expensive because there are no additional burdens placed on radiologic technologists, and the performance is physician dependent. Indeed, numerous studies have described near 100% sensitivity and 90% to 95% specificity if a thorough examination is performed.1–5 Received November 22, 2011, from the Department of Emergency Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts USA. Revision requested November 30, 2011. Revised manuscript accepted for publication December 30, 2011. Address correspondence to Vicki E. Noble, MD, Department of Emergency Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, 0 Emerson, 3B, 55 Fruit St, Boston MA 02114 USA. E-mail: [email protected] W
منابع مشابه
Comparison of the Diagnostic Values of Four-Point and Two-point Ultrasound Versus CT Scan in Determining Pneumothorax
Background and Objectives: Pneumothorax is a life-threatening complication and the most common cause of which is trauma. Early diagnosis and treatment of Pneumothorax are very important. The aim of this study was to compare the diagnostic values of four-point and double-point ultrasound versus CT scan in determining pneumothorax in Rasul-Akram and Hafte-Tir Hospitals during the years 2015 - 201...
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Abstract Aims and objectives: Pneumothorax is a common finding after trauma and with a wide range of clinical manifestations, from a concealed pneumothorax detectable only by a CT scan accidentally, to a potentially fatal tension pneumothorax. Pneumothorax can gradually progress to tension pneumothorax and become an emergency, consequently, a timely diagnosis is essential. Most traumatic patie...
متن کاملThe ultrasonographic deep sulcus sign in traumatic pneumothorax.
A series of 186 patients with blunt chest trauma was studied with transthoracic ultrasonography to diagnose pneumothorax and to evaluate its size and location. The results were compared with bedside chest radiography and spiral CT scan. The prevalence of pneumothorax on CT scan was 56/186 (30.1%). Pneumothorax was proven on radiography in 30/56 cases without false positive results: "radiographi...
متن کاملProspective evaluation of thoracic ultrasound in the detection of pneumothorax.
BACKGROUND Thoracic ultrasound may rapidly diagnose pneumothorax when radiographs are unobtainable; the accuracy is not known. METHODS We prospectively evaluated thoracic ultrasound detection of pneumothorax in patients at high suspicion of pneumothorax. The presence of "lung sliding" or "comet tail" artifacts were determined in patients by ultrasound before radiologic verification of pneumot...
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921 April 2015 L UNG ultrasound is a valuable diagnostic modality that allows for rapid assessment of pneumothorax. Compared to chest radiographs, lung ultrasound is more sensitive for pneumothorax.1–3 Presence of lung sliding can be assessed with 2D or M-mode ultrasound and excludes pneumothorax at the intercostal space of the properly orientated ultrasound transducer (fig. A). M-mode displays...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of ultrasound in medicine : official journal of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine
دوره 31 3 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2012