Lieurance Russell, Scheatzle Mark, Johnjulio William A, O'Neill John
Department of Emergency Medicine, West Penn Hospital/Allegheny Health Network, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Allegheny General Hospital/Allegheny Health Network, 320 E North Ave, Pittsburgh, PA, 15212, USA.
Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg. 2023 Apr;49(2):777-783. doi: 10.1007/s00068-022-02109-4. Epub 2022 Oct 26.
Emergency and trauma physicians typically rely on anatomic landmarks to determine the proper intercostal space for emergent tube thoracostomy. However, physicians using this technique select a potentially dangerous insertion site too inferior in nearly one-third of cases, which have the potential to result in subdiaphragmatic puncture. We investigated a point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) thoracic "Quick Look" procedure as a technique to allow visualization of underlying structures to avoid tube misplacement.
We performed an observational study of adult emergency department patients and their treating physicians. The patient's emergency physician was asked to rapidly identify and mark a hypothetical tube thoracostomy insertion site on the patient's chest wall. An ultrasound fellow then performed a POCUS thoracic "Quick Look" exam with a phased-array probe placed directly over the marked site. Over one regular respiratory cycle, the identification of standard lung pattern was considered a negative scan whereas visualization of the diaphragm with underlying liver or spleen was considered a positive scan. Time for completion of the "Quick Look" scan was measured and inter-rater reliability was determined through image review by a single, blinded ultrasound director.
Seventy-six thoracic "Quick Look" scans were performed on patient subjects, of which 17% (13/76, 95%CI 8-26%) were positive. The average time for performing the "Quick Look" exam was 43 s (95%CI 30-57). Inter-rater reliability of the thoracic "Quick Look" was excellent (κ = 0.95).
Thoracic "Quick Look" exams performed at mock chest tube insertion sites demonstrated potentially dangerous insertions in 17% of the cases. POCUS thoracic "Quick Look" may be a rapid and reliable technique that improves safety when placing an emergent chest tube.
急诊和创伤科医生通常依靠解剖标志来确定急诊胸腔闭式引流术的合适肋间间隙。然而,使用该技术的医生在近三分之一的病例中选择了位置过低的潜在危险插入部位,这有可能导致膈下穿刺。我们研究了一种床旁超声(POCUS)胸部“快速检查”程序,作为一种能够可视化深部结构以避免引流管误置的技术。
我们对成年急诊科患者及其主治医生进行了一项观察性研究。要求患者的急诊医生在患者胸壁上快速识别并标记一个假设的胸腔闭式引流术插入部位。然后,一名超声科住院医师使用相控阵探头直接置于标记部位进行POCUS胸部“快速检查”。在一个正常呼吸周期内,识别出标准肺模式被视为阴性扫描,而观察到膈肌及其下方的肝脏或脾脏则被视为阳性扫描。测量完成“快速检查”扫描的时间,并通过由一名盲法超声主任进行图像审查来确定评分者间信度。
对患者进行了76次胸部“快速检查”扫描,其中17%(13/76,95%CI 8-26%)为阳性。进行“快速检查”的平均时间为43秒(95%CI 30-57)。胸部“快速检查”的评分者间信度极佳(κ = 0.95)。
在模拟胸腔引流管插入部位进行的胸部“快速检查”显示,17%的病例存在潜在危险的插入情况。POCUS胸部“快速检查”可能是一种快速可靠的技术,可提高急诊胸腔引流管置入的安全性。