Emergency Point-of-Care Ultrasound Program, Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, M5G 1X8, Canada.
Department of Pediatrics, The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, M5G 1X8, Canada.
J Pediatr Urol. 2019 Dec;15(6):608.e1-608.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.jpurol.2019.07.003. Epub 2019 Jul 12.
Acute scrotum is a common presentation to the pediatric emergency department, and ultrasound is frequently used to narrow the differential diagnosis. Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is increasingly used by urologists and emergency physicians and could potentially be used to detect pediatric testicular torsion.
This study aimed to determine the accuracy of POCUS by pediatric emergency physicians in diagnosing testicular torsion and the agreement between point-of-care ultrasound and final diagnosis for other causes of acute scrotum.
A chart review of patients presenting to the study emergency department who received POCUS by a pediatric emergency physician, as well as radiology department ultrasound and/or surgery, was performed. Charts were reviewed for POCUS diagnoses, final diagnoses, and imaging time metrics.
A total of 120 patients met study criteria, with 12 cases of testicular torsion. The diagnostic accuracy of POCUS for testicular torsion is described in the summary table. For all causes of acute scrotum, point-of-care ultrasound agreed with final diagnosis in 70% (95% confidence interval [CI] 62-78%) of cases, and more experienced point-of-care ultrasound users displayed higher agreement with final diagnosis. Point-of-care ultrasound results were generated a median of 73 min (Q1 = 51, Q3 = 112) before radiology department ultrasound results.
Scrotal POCUS performed by pediatric emergency physicians appears to be an accurate tool to detect testicular torsion in children with acute scrotum and saves time compared with radiology ultrasound. The study results may not be generalizable to hospitals without a multidisciplinary POCUS system for quality assurance and image sharing. Future work on POCUS for acute scrotum should investigate its impact on patient outcomes, cost-effectiveness, and family satisfaction.
Point-of-care ultrasound by pediatric emergency physicians is accurate for detecting testicular torsion in children with acute scrotum and could expedite diagnosis of this time-sensitive condition.
急性阴囊是小儿急诊常见的表现,超声检查常用于缩小鉴别诊断范围。即时超声(POCUS)越来越多地被泌尿科医生和急诊医生使用,并且有可能用于检测小儿睾丸扭转。
本研究旨在确定小儿急诊医生使用 POCUS 诊断睾丸扭转的准确性,以及 POCUS 与其他急性阴囊病因的最终诊断的一致性。
对在研究急诊部接受小儿急诊医生 POCUS 检查的患者进行图表回顾,同时还检查了放射科超声和/或手术结果。对图表进行了 POCUS 诊断、最终诊断和影像学时间指标的回顾。
共有 120 名患者符合研究标准,其中 12 例为睾丸扭转。POCUS 对睾丸扭转的诊断准确性见总结表。对于所有急性阴囊病因,POCUS 与最终诊断的一致性为 70%(95%置信区间 [CI] 62-78%),更有经验的 POCUS 用户与最终诊断的一致性更高。POCUS 结果的生成时间中位数为放射科超声结果前 73 分钟(Q1=51,Q3=112)。
小儿急诊医生进行的阴囊 POCUS 似乎是一种准确的工具,可以检测急性阴囊患儿的睾丸扭转,与放射科超声相比可以节省时间。研究结果可能不适用于没有多学科 POCUS 系统进行质量保证和图像共享的医院。关于急性阴囊的 POCUS 未来研究应调查其对患者结局、成本效益和家庭满意度的影响。
小儿急诊医生的即时超声对检测小儿急性阴囊的睾丸扭转是准确的,并且可以加快对这种时间敏感的疾病的诊断。