• Military Medical Research · Dec 2018

    Military trainees can accurately measure optic nerve sheath diameter after a brief training session.

    • Joseph Betcher, Torben K Becker, Peter Stoyanoff, Jim Cranford, and Nik Theyyunni.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, Mercy Health Muskegon, 1500 E Sherman Blvd, Muskegon, MI, 49444, USA. joebetcher@gmail.com.
    • Mil Med Res. 2018 Dec 20; 5 (1): 42.

    BackgroundIdentification of elevated intracranial pressure is important following traumatic brain injury. We assessed the feasibility of educating military trainees on accurately obtaining optic nerve sheath diameter measurements using a brief didactic and hands-on training session. Optic nerve sheath diameter is a noninvasive surrogate marker for elevated intracranial pressure, and may be of value in remote military operations, where rapid triage decisions must be made without access to advanced medical equipment.MethodsMilitary trainees with minimal ultrasound experience were given a 5-min didactic presentation on optic nerve sheath diameter ultrasound. Trainees practiced optic nerve sheath diameter measurements guided by emergency physician ultrasound experts. Trainees then measured the optic nerve sheath diameter on normal volunteers. Following this, a trained physician measured the optic nerve sheath diameter on the same volunteer as a criterion standard. An average of three measurements was taken.ResultsTwenty-three military trainees were enrolled. A mixed design ANOVA was used to compare measurements by trainees to those of physicians, with a mean difference of - 0.6 mm (P = 0.76). A Bland-Altman analysis showed that the degree of bias in optic nerve sheath diameter measures provided by trainees was very small: d = - 0.004 for the right eye and d = - 0.007 for the left eye.ConclusionThis study demonstrates that optic nerve sheath diameter measurement can be accurately performed by novice ultrasonographers after a brief training session. If validated, point-of-care optic nerve sheath diameter measurement could impact the triage of injured patients in remote areas.

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