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Journal of critical care · Sep 2010
ReviewWhole-body ultrasound in the intensive care unit: a new role for an aged technique.
- Andreas Karabinis, Mariantina Fragou, and Dimitrios Karakitsos.
- Intensive Care Unit, General Hospital of Athens, Athens 11527, Greece.
- J Crit Care. 2010 Sep 1;25(3):509-13.
AbstractManagement of critically ill patients requires rapid and safe diagnostic techniques. Ultrasonography has become an indispensable tool that supplements physical examination in the intensive care unit. It enables early recognition of neurological emergencies, assists the diagnosis of abdominal and lung pathologies, and provides real-time information on the cardiac performance of critically ill patients. Furthermore, it detects possible infectious sites and renders therapeutic invasive procedures more convenient and less complicated. Whole-body ultrasound in the hands of adequately trained intensivists has the ability to reinvigorate the physical examination, without subjecting the patient to excessive irradiation and the risks of transport.Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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