Bellini Tommaso, Chianucci Benedetta, D'Alessandro Matteo, Ricci Margherita, Calevo Maria Grazia, Misley Silvia, Piccotti Emanuela, Moscatelli Andrea
Pediatric Emergency Room and Emergency Medicine Unit, Emergency Department, IRCCS Istituto Giannina Gaslini, Via G. Gaslini 5, 16147, Genoa, Italy.
Pediatric and Neonatology Unit, San Paolo Hospital (Savona), IRCCS Istituto Giannina Gaslini, Genoa, Italy.
Ultrasound J. 2024 Feb 21;16(1):13. doi: 10.1186/s13089-023-00354-1.
Dehydration is among the most common causes of Pediatric Emergency Department admission; however, no clinical signs, symptoms, or biomarkers have demonstrated sufficient sensitivity, specificity, or reliability to predict dehydration.
We conducted a prospective, monocentric, observational study at Giannina Gaslini Hospital, a tertiary care pediatric hospital. Our study aimed to compare inferior vena cava ultrasound measurement with volume depletion biomarkers to understand if point-of-care ultrasound could help grade, evaluate, and better manage dehydration in children presenting to the pediatric emergency department. We enrolled patients under the age of 14 who required blood tests in the suspect of dehydration; for each patient, we collected values of venous pH, natremia, bicarbonatemia, uric acid, chloremia, and blood urea nitrogen. For each patient, we performed two ultrasound scans to calculate the Inferior Vena Cava/Aorta area ratio and to assess the IVC collapsibility index; moreover, we described the presence of the "kiss sign" (100% IVC walls collapsing during the inspiratory phase).
Patients with the "kiss sign" (25/65 patients, 38.5% of the total) showed worse blood tests, in particular, uric acid levels (p = 0.0003), bicarbonatemia (p = 0.001) and natriemia (p = 0.0003). Moreover, patients with the "kiss sign" showed a high frequency of ≥ 2 pathological blood tests (p = 0.0002). We found no statistical significant difference when comparing the IVC/Ao ratio and IVC-CI with the considered blood tests.
The "kiss sign" seems to be related to worse hydration state, whereas IVC/Ao and IVC-CI are not. In an emergency setting, where physicians must take diagnostic-therapeutic decisions quickly, the presence of the "kiss sign" in patients suspected to be dehydrated can be a helpful tool in their management.
脱水是儿科急诊科住院的最常见原因之一;然而,尚无临床体征、症状或生物标志物显示出足够的敏感性、特异性或可靠性来预测脱水。
我们在一家三级儿科专科医院吉安尼娜·加斯利尼医院进行了一项前瞻性、单中心观察性研究。我们的研究旨在比较下腔静脉超声测量与容量耗竭生物标志物,以了解即时超声是否有助于对儿科急诊科就诊的儿童脱水进行分级、评估和更好地管理。我们纳入了14岁以下因疑似脱水而需要进行血液检查的患者;对于每位患者,我们收集了静脉血pH值、血钠、血碳酸氢根、尿酸、血氯和血尿素氮的值。对于每位患者,我们进行了两次超声扫描,以计算下腔静脉/主动脉面积比并评估下腔静脉塌陷指数;此外,我们描述了“亲吻征”(吸气期下腔静脉壁100%塌陷)的存在情况。
出现“亲吻征”的患者(25/65例患者,占总数的38.5%)血液检查结果更差,尤其是尿酸水平(p = 0.0003)、血碳酸氢根(p = 0.001)和血钠(p = 0.0003)。此外,出现“亲吻征”的患者多项血液检查结果异常(≥2项)的频率较高(p = 0.0002)。将下腔静脉/主动脉比值和下腔静脉塌陷指数与所考虑的血液检查结果进行比较时,我们未发现统计学上的显著差异。
“亲吻征”似乎与较差的水合状态相关,但下腔静脉/主动脉比值和下腔静脉塌陷指数并非如此。在紧急情况下,医生必须迅速做出诊断治疗决策,疑似脱水患者出现“亲吻征”可为其管理提供有用的工具。