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- Clemens Kill, Alexander Sattler, Albrecht Neesse, Andreas Jerrentrup, Christian Görg, Thomas Mathias Gress, and Steffen Kunsch.
- Division of Interdisciplinary Prehospital Emergency Medicine, University Giessen and Marburg, Marburg, Germany. neesse@med.uni-marburg.de
- Eur J Emerg Med. 2012 Jun 1;19(3):161-6.
ObjectivesTo examine the feasibility and diagnostic value of a novel prehospital chest ultrasound algorithm in patients with dyspnea.MethodsSixty-two patients (32 men, 30 women, mean 67.1 years, range 20-90 years) with acute dyspnea prospectively underwent chest sonography with a portable ultrasound device. The algorithm included five sectional views (four-chamber subxyphoidal view, left and right laterodorsal view, left and right anterior intercostal space two to four view) screening for pleural and pericardial effusion, right heart distension, and pneumothorax. The prehospital sonographic findings were confirmed by chest radiograph, ultrasonography, and clinical follow-up in the emergency department.ResultsPrehospital chest emergency sonography trial was completed in 56 patients. Mean examination time was 2 min, and no scan took longer than 5 min. Sonography was easily integrated in the prehospital workflow alongside paramedic treatment without delay of treatment or transport. The most common diagnoses associated with acute dyspnea were (a) acute coronary syndrome (n=12, 21%), (b) decompensated congestive heart failure (CHF) (n=11, 20%), and (c) chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) (n=10, 18%). Pleural effusion was detected in 100% of CHF, 17% of acute coronary syndrome, and 20% of COPD patients, constituting a highly significant parameter in the differential diagnosis (P<0.01). Ultrasonography provided a helpful tool in n=38 (68%), and additional therapeutic consequences were drawn in n=14 (25%).ConclusionPrehospital chest emergency sonography trial is a novel prehospital ultrasound algorithm for patients with dyspnea. Pleural effusion may serve as a novel prehospital marker for patients with decompensated CHF, thus facilitating the often difficult differential diagnosis between CHF and COPD.
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