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Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2010

Focused Cardiac Ultrasound in the Emergent Setting: A Consensus Statement of the American Society of Echocardiography and American College of Emergency Physicians

Arthur J. Labovitz; Vicki E. Noble; Michelle Bierig; Steven A. Goldstein; Robert Jones; Smadar Kort; Thomas R. Porter; Kirk T. Spencer; Vivek S. Tayal; Kevin Wei

The use of ultrasound has developed over the last 50 years into an indispensable first-line test for the cardiac evaluation of symptomatic patients. The technologic miniaturization and improvement in transducer technology, as well as the implementation of educational curriculum changes in residency training programs and specialty practice, have facilitated the integration of focused cardiac ultrasound into practice by specialties such as emergency medicine. In the emergency department, focused cardiac ultrasound has become a fundamental tool to expedite the diagnostic evaluation of the patient at the bedside and to initiate emergent treatment and triage decisions by the emergency physician.


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2007

Correlation of Optic Nerve Sheath Diameter with Direct Measurement of Intracranial Pressure

Heidi H. Kimberly; Sachita Shah; Keith A. Marill; Vicki E. Noble

BACKGROUND Measurements of the optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) using bedside ultrasound (US) have been shown to correlate with clinical and radiologic signs and symptoms of increased intracranial pressure (ICP). OBJECTIVES Previous literature has identified 5 mm as the ONSD measurement above which patients exhibit either clinical or radiologic signs of elevated ICP. The goals of this study were to evaluate the association between ONSD and ICP and to validate the commonly used ONSD threshold of 5 mm using direct measurements of ICP as measured by ventriculostomy. METHODS A prospective blinded observational study was performed using a convenience sample of adult patients in both the emergency department (ED) and the neurologic intensive care unit (ICU) who had invasive intracranial monitors placed as part of their clinical care. Ocular USs were performed with a 10(-5) MHz linear probe. Emergency physicians (EPs) with previous ocular US experience performed ONSD measurements while blinded to the contemporaneous ICP reading obtained directly from invasive monitoring. The association between ONSD and ICP was assessed with the Spearman rank correlation coefficient, and a receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve was created to determine the optimal ONSD cutoff to detect ICP > 20 cm H2O. RESULTS Thirty-eight ocular USs were performed on 15 individual patients. Spearman rank correlation coefficient of ONSD and ICP was 0.59 (p < 0.0005) demonstrating a significant positive correlation. An ROC curve was created to assess the ability of ONSD to distinguish an abnormal ICP greater than 20 cm H2O. The area under the ROC curve was 0.93 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.84 to 0.99). Based on inspection of the ROC curve, ONSD > 5 mm performed well to detect ICP > 20 cm H(2)O with a sensitivity of 88% (95% CI = 47% to 99%) and specificity of 93% (95% CI = 78% to 99%). CONCLUSIONS Using an ROC curve the authors systematically confirmed the commonly used threshold of ONSD > 5 mm to detect ICP > 20 cm H2O. This study directly correlates ventriculostomy measurements of ICP with US ONSD measurements and provides further support for the use of ONSD measurements as a noninvasive test for elevated ICP.


Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2014

International Evidence-Based Recommendations for Focused Cardiac Ultrasound

Gabriele Via; Arif Hussain; Mike Wells; Robert F. Reardon; Mahmoud Elbarbary; Vicki E. Noble; James W. Tsung; Aleksandar Neskovic; Susanna Price; Achikam Oren-Grinberg; Andrew S. Liteplo; Ricardo Cordioli; Nitha Naqvi; Philippe Rola; Jan Poelaert; Tatjana Golob Guliĉ; Erik Sloth; Arthur J. Labovitz; Bruce J. Kimura; Raoul Breitkreutz; Navroz D. Masani; Justin Bowra; Daniel Talmor; Fabio Guarracino; Adrian Goudie; Wang Xiaoting; Rajesh Chawla; Maurizio Galderisi; Micheal Blaivas; Tomislav Petrovic

BACKGROUND Focused cardiac ultrasound (FoCUS) is a simplified, clinician-performed application of echocardiography that is rapidly expanding in use, especially in emergency and critical care medicine. Performed by appropriately trained clinicians, typically not cardiologists, FoCUS ascertains the essential information needed in critical scenarios for time-sensitive clinical decision making. A need exists for quality evidence-based review and clinical recommendations on its use. METHODS The World Interactive Network Focused on Critical UltraSound conducted an international, multispecialty, evidence-based, methodologically rigorous consensus process on FoCUS. Thirty-three experts from 16 countries were involved. A systematic multiple-database, double-track literature search (January 1980 to September 2013) was performed. The Grading of Recommendation, Assessment, Development and Evaluation method was used to determine the quality of available evidence and subsequent development of the recommendations. Evidence-based panel judgment and consensus was collected and analyzed by means of the RAND appropriateness method. RESULTS During four conferences (in New Delhi, Milan, Boston, and Barcelona), 108 statements were elaborated and discussed. Face-to-face debates were held in two rounds using the modified Delphi technique. Disagreement occurred for 10 statements. Weak or conditional recommendations were made for two statements and strong or very strong recommendations for 96. These recommendations delineate the nature, applications, technique, potential benefits, clinical integration, education, and certification principles for FoCUS, both for adults and pediatric patients. CONCLUSIONS This document presents the results of the first International Conference on FoCUS. For the first time, evidence-based clinical recommendations comprehensively address this branch of point-of-care ultrasound, providing a framework for FoCUS to standardize its application in different clinical settings around the world.


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2009

Emergency thoracic ultrasound in the differentiation of the etiology of shortness of breath (ETUDES): sonographic B-lines and N-terminal pro-brain-type natriuretic peptide in diagnosing congestive heart failure.

Andrew S. Liteplo; Keith A. Marill; Tomas Villen; Robert Miller; Alice F. Murray; Peter E. Croft; Roberta Capp; Vicki E. Noble

OBJECTIVES Sonographic thoracic B-lines and N-terminal pro-brain-type natriuretic peptide (NT-ProBNP) have been shown to help differentiate between congestive heart failure (CHF) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The authors hypothesized that ultrasound (US) could be used to predict CHF and that it would provide additional predictive information when combined with NT-ProBNP. They also sought to determine optimal two- and eight-zone scanning protocols when different thresholds for a positive scan were used. METHODS This was a prospective, observational study of a convenience sample of adult patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with shortness of breath. Each patient had an eight-zone thoracic US performed by one of five sonographers, and serum NT-ProBNP levels were measured. Chart review by two physicians blinded to the US results served as the criterion standard. The operating characteristics of two- and eight-zone thoracic US alone, compared to, and combined with NT-ProBNP test results for predicting CHF were calculated using both dichotomous and interval likelihood ratios (LRs). RESULTS One-hundred patients were enrolled. Six were excluded because of incomplete data. Results of 94 patients were analyzed. A positive eight-zone US, defined as at least two positive zones on each side, had a positive likelihood ratio (LR+) of 3.88 (99% confidence interval [CI] = 1.55 to 9.73) and a negative likelihood ratio (LR-) of 0.5 (95% CI = 0.30 to 0.82), while the NT-ProBNP demonstrated a LR+ of 2.3 (95% CI = 1.41 to 3.76) and LR- of 0.24 (95% CI = 0.09 to 0.66). Using interval LRs for the eight-zone US test alone, the LR for a totally positive test (all eight zones positive) was infinite and for a totally negative test (no zones positive) was 0.22 (95% CI = 0.06 to 0.80). For two-zone US, interval LRs were 4.73 (95% CI = 2.10 to 10.63) when inferior lateral zones were positive bilaterally and 0.3 (95% CI = 0.13 to 0.71) when these were negative. These changed to 8.04 (95% CI = 1.76 to 37.33) and 0.11 (95% CI = 0.02 to 0.69), respectively, when congruent with NT-ProBNP. CONCLUSIONS Bedside thoracic US for B-lines can be a useful test for diagnosing CHF. Predictive accuracy is greatly improved when studies are totally positive or totally negative. A two-zone protocol performs similarly to an eight-zone protocol. Thoracic US can be used alone or can provide additional predictive power to NT-ProBNP in the immediate evaluation of dyspneic patients presenting to the ED.


Chest | 2009

Ultrasound Assessment for Extravascular Lung Water in Patients Undergoing Hemodialysis: Time Course for Resolution

Vicki E. Noble; Alice F. Murray; Roberta Capp; Mary H. Sylvia-Reardon; David Steele; Andrew S. Liteplo

BACKGROUND Sonographic B-lines, also known as lung comets, have been shown to correlate with the presence of extravascular lung water (EVLW). Absent in normal lungs, these sonographic findings become prominent as interstitia and alveoli fill with fluid. Characterization of the dynamics of B-lines, specifically their rate of disappearance as volume is removed, has not been previously described. In this study, we describe the dynamics of B-line resolution in patients undergoing hemodialysis. METHODS Patients undergoing hemodialysis underwent three chest ultrasound examinations: before, at the midpoint, and after dialysis. We followed a previously described chest ultrasound protocol that counts the number of B-lines visualized in 28 lung zones. Baseline demographics, assessment of ejection fraction, time elapsed, net volume of fluid removed, and subjective degree of shortness of breath were recorded for each patient. RESULTS Forty of 45 patients completed full dialysis runs and had all three lung scans performed; 6 of 40 patients had zero or one B-line predialysis, and none of these 6 patients gained B-lines during dialysis. Thirty-four of 40 patients had statistically significant reductions in the number of B-lines from predialysis to the midpoint scan and from predialysis to postdialysis with a p value < 0.001. There was no association between subjective dyspnea scores and number of B-lines removed. CONCLUSIONS B-line resolution appears to occur real-time as fluid is removed from the body, and this change was statistically significant. These data support thoracic ultrasound as a useful method for evaluating real-time changes in EVLW and in assessing a patients physiologic response to the removal of fluid. TRIAL REGISTRATION Massachusetts General Hospital trial registration protocol No. 2007P 002226.


Chest | 2009

Original ResearchChest UltrasonographyUltrasound Assessment for Extravascular Lung Water in Patients Undergoing Hemodialysis: Time Course for Resolution

Vicki E. Noble; Alice F. Murray; Roberta Capp; Mary H. Sylvia-Reardon; David Steele; Andrew S. Liteplo

BACKGROUND Sonographic B-lines, also known as lung comets, have been shown to correlate with the presence of extravascular lung water (EVLW). Absent in normal lungs, these sonographic findings become prominent as interstitia and alveoli fill with fluid. Characterization of the dynamics of B-lines, specifically their rate of disappearance as volume is removed, has not been previously described. In this study, we describe the dynamics of B-line resolution in patients undergoing hemodialysis. METHODS Patients undergoing hemodialysis underwent three chest ultrasound examinations: before, at the midpoint, and after dialysis. We followed a previously described chest ultrasound protocol that counts the number of B-lines visualized in 28 lung zones. Baseline demographics, assessment of ejection fraction, time elapsed, net volume of fluid removed, and subjective degree of shortness of breath were recorded for each patient. RESULTS Forty of 45 patients completed full dialysis runs and had all three lung scans performed; 6 of 40 patients had zero or one B-line predialysis, and none of these 6 patients gained B-lines during dialysis. Thirty-four of 40 patients had statistically significant reductions in the number of B-lines from predialysis to the midpoint scan and from predialysis to postdialysis with a p value < 0.001. There was no association between subjective dyspnea scores and number of B-lines removed. CONCLUSIONS B-line resolution appears to occur real-time as fluid is removed from the body, and this change was statistically significant. These data support thoracic ultrasound as a useful method for evaluating real-time changes in EVLW and in assessing a patients physiologic response to the removal of fluid. TRIAL REGISTRATION Massachusetts General Hospital trial registration protocol No. 2007P 002226.


International Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2008

Development of an ultrasound training curriculum in a limited resource international setting: successes and challenges of ultrasound training in rural Rwanda

Sachita Shah; Vicki E. Noble; Irenee Umulisa; Jean Marie Dushimiyimana; Gene Bukhman; Joia S. Mukherjee; Michael W. Rich; Henry Epino

BackgroundOver the last decade, the diffusion of ultrasound technology to nontraditional users has been rapid and far-reaching. Much research and effort has been focused on developing an ultrasound curriculum and training and practice guidelines for these users. The potential for this diagnostic tool is not limited to the developed world and in many respects ultrasound is adaptable to limited resource international settings. However, needs-based curriculum development, training guidelines, impact on resource utilization, and sustainability are not well studied in the developing world setting.AimsWe review one method of introducing applicable curriculum, training local providers, and sustaining a comprehensive ultrasound program.MethodsTwo rural Rwandan hospitals affiliated with a US nongovernmental organization participated in a pilot ultrasound training program. Prior to introduction of ultrasound, local physicians completed a survey to determine the perceived importance of various ultrasound scan types. Hospital records were also reviewed to determine disease and presenting complaint prevalence as part of an initial needs assessment and to define our curriculum. We hypothesized certain studies would be more utilized and have a greater impact given available treatment resources.ResultsWe review here the choice of curriculum, the training plan, helpful equipment specifications, and implementation of ongoing measures of quality assessment and sustainability. Our 9-week lecture and practice-based ultrasound curriculum included obstetrics, abdominal, renal, hepatobiliary, cardiac, pleural, vascular, and procedural ultrasound.ConclusionsWhile ultrasound as a diagnostic modality for resource-poor parts of the world has generated interest for years, recent advances in technology have brought ultrasound again to the forefront as a sustainable and high impact technology for resource-poor developing world nations. From our experience in rural Rwanda, we conclude that ultrasound remains helpful in patient care and the diagnostic impact is enhanced by choosing the correct applications to implement. We also conclude that ultrasound is a teachable skill, with a several week intensive training period involving hands-on practice skills and plans for long-term learning and have begun a second phase of evaluating knowledge retention for this introductory program.


BMC International Health and Human Rights | 2009

Impact of the introduction of ultrasound services in a limited resource setting: rural Rwanda 2008

Sachita Shah; Henry Epino; Gene Bukhman; Irenee Umulisa; Jean Marie Dushimiyimana; Andrew Reichman; Vicki E. Noble

BackgroundOver the last decade, utilization of ultrasound technology by non-radiologist physicians has grown. Recent advances in affordability, durability, and portability have brought ultrasound to the forefront as a sustainable and high impact technology for use in developing world clinical settings as well. However, ultrasounds impact on patient management plans, program sustainability, and which ultrasound applications are useful in this setting has not been well studied.MethodsUltrasound services were introduced at two rural Rwandan district hospitals affiliated with Partners in Health, a US nongovernmental organization. Data sheets for each ultrasound scan performed during routine clinical care were collected and analyzed to determine patient demographics, which ultrasound applications were most frequently used, and whether the use of the ultrasound changed patient management plans. Ultrasound scans performed by the local physicians during the post-training period were reviewed for accuracy of interpretation and image quality by an ultrasound fellowship trained emergency medicine physician from the United States who was blinded to the original interpretation.ResultsAdult women appeared to benefit most from the presence of ultrasound services. Of the 345 scans performed during the study period, obstetrical scanning was the most frequently used application. Evaluation of gestational age, fetal head position, and placental positioning were the most common findings. However, other applications used included abdominal, cardiac, renal, pleural, procedural guidance, and vascular ultrasounds.Ultrasound changed patient management plans in 43% of total patients scanned. The most common change was to plan a surgical procedure. The ultrasound program appears sustainable; local staff performed 245 ultrasound scans in the 11 weeks after the departure of the ultrasound instructor. Post-training scan review showed the concordance rate of interpretation between the Rwandese physicians and the ultrasound-trained quality review physicians was 96%.ConclusionWe suggest ultrasound is a useful modality that particularly benefits womens health and obstetrical care in the developing world. Ultrasound services significantly impact patient management plans especially with regards to potential surgical interventions. After an initial training period, it appears that an ultrasound program led by local health care providers is sustainable and lead to accurate diagnoses in a rural international setting.


Pediatrics | 2008

Bedside ultrasound in pediatric emergency medicine.

Jason A. Levy; Vicki E. Noble

Bedside emergency ultrasound has been used by emergency physicians for >20 years for a variety of conditions. In adult centers, emergency ultrasound is routinely used in the management of victims of blunt abdominal trauma, in patients with abdominal aortic aneurysm and biliary disease, and in women with first-trimester pregnancy complications. Although its use has grown dramatically in the last decade in adult emergency departments, only recently has this tool been embraced by pediatric emergency physicians. As the modality advances and becomes more available, it will be important for primary care pediatricians to understand its uses and limitations and to ensure that pediatric emergency physicians have access to the proper training, equipment, and experience. This article is meant to review the current literature relating to emergency ultrasound in pediatric emergency medicine, as well as to describe potential pediatric applications.


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2010

Ultrasound Assessment of Severe Dehydration in Children With Diarrhea and Vomiting

Adam C. Levine; Sachita Shah; Irenee Umulisa; Richard B. Mark Munyaneza; Jean Marie Dushimiyimana; Katrina Stegmann; Juvenal Musavuli; Protogene Ngabitsinze; Sara Stulac; Henry Epino; Vicki E. Noble

OBJECTIVES The objective of this study was to determine the test characteristics for two different ultrasound (US) measures of severe dehydration in children (aorta to inferior vena cava [IVC] ratio and IVC inspiratory collapse) and one clinical measure of severe dehydration (the World Health Organization [WHO] dehydration scale). METHODS The authors enrolled a prospective cohort of children presenting with diarrhea and/or vomiting to three rural Rwandan hospitals. Children were assessed clinically using the WHO scale and then underwent US of the IVC by a second clinician. All children were weighed on admission and then fluid-resuscitated according to standard hospital protocols. A percent weight change between admission and discharge of greater than 10% was considered the criterion standard for severe dehydration. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were created for each of the three tests of severe dehydration compared to the criterion standard. RESULTS Children ranged in age from 1 month to 10 years; 29% of the children had severe dehydration according to the criterion standard. Of the three different measures of dehydration tested, only US assessment of the aorta/IVC ratio had an area under the ROC curve statistically different from the reference line. At its best cut-point, the aorta/IVC ratio had a sensitivity of 93% and specificity of 59%, compared with 93% and 35% for IVC inspiratory collapse and 73% and 43% for the WHO scale. CONCLUSIONS Ultrasound of the aorta/IVC ratio can be used to identify severe dehydration in children presenting with acute diarrhea and may be helpful in guiding clinical management.

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Bret P. Nelson

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Heidi H. Kimberly

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Joshua S. Rempell

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Alex F. Manini

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Anthony J. Dean

University of Pennsylvania

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Sachita Shah

University of Washington

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