Ultrasound in medicine & biology
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Ultrasound Med Biol · Jun 2012
A pilot study evaluating real-time shear wave ultrasound elastography of miscellaneous non-nodal neck masses in a routine head and neck ultrasound clinic.
A pilot study was performed to evaluate shear wave ultrasound elastography (SWE) for miscellaneous non-nodal/salivary/thyroid neck lesions. Forty-six lesions undergoing conventional sonography also underwent SWE. Elastic moduli from the stiffest areas in lesions were correlated with diagnosis. ⋯ All malignant lesions were suspected on conventional sonography. The preliminary data indicate that SWE is feasible for miscellaneous neck lesions. SWE would not have altered management in terms of detecting undisclosed malignancies, although as a quantitative technique, it may increase the diagnostic confidence of less experienced operators performing head and neck ultrasound.
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Ultrasound Med Biol · Apr 2012
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyEchogenic regional anaesthesia needles: a comparison study in Thiel cadavers.
Ultrasound guidance is now the standard procedure for regional nerve block in anesthesiology. However, ultrasonic visualisation of needle manipulation and guidance within tissues remains a problem. Two new echogenic needles (Pajunk and Braun) have been introduced to anesthesiology clinical practice but evaluation has been restricted to preserved animal tissue. ⋯ The Pajunk echogenic needle was more visible than the Braun standard needle in-plane (p = 0.04), and the Braun standard and Braun echogenic needles out-of-plane (p = 0.02). Independent predictors of visibility using logistic regression were needle (p < 0.001) and plane of insertion (p = 0.08), receiver operator characteristic (ROC) area under the curve 0.90. In conclusion, the Pajunk echogenic needle offers the best visibility for ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia.
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Ultrasound Med Biol · Mar 2012
ReviewClinical integrated ultrasound of the thorax including causes of shock in nontraumatic critically ill patients. A practical approach.
A rapid identification of the causes of hemodynamic instability or cardiac arrest is crucial for correct treatment. In a critical care setting, ultrasound seems to be an ideal tool for a rapid diagnosis. ⋯ The integration of data that can rapidly be obtained from the heart, lung, inferior vena cava, abdomen and leg vein examination are often essential for the diagnosis and treatment in critically ill patients. The role and potentiality of integrated ultrasound in cardiac arrest, shock/hypotension and severe dyspnea are considered in this article.
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Ultrasound Med Biol · Feb 2012
Left ventricular assist devices: physiologic assessment using echocardiography for management and optimization.
Left ventricular assist devices (LVAD) are being deployed increasingly in patients with severe left ventricular dysfunction and medically refractory congestive heart failure of any etiology. The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently approved the use of the Thoratec Heartmate II (Thoratec Corporation, Pleasanton, CA, USA) for outpatient use. Echocardiography is fundamental during each stage of patient management, pre-LVAD placement, during LVAD placement, for postoperative LVAD optimization and long-term follow-up. We present a pragmatic and systematic echocardiographic approach that serves as a guide for the management of left ventricular assist devices.
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Ultrasound interstitial syndrome is an echographic pattern of the lung characterized by the presence of multiple acoustic artifacts called "comets" or B-lines. It correlates to increase in extravascular lung water and to interstitial lung disease. From the physical and genetic point of view, the characteristics and the entity of this correlation have not yet been studied. ⋯ Artifacts (comets) showed a different concentration from a completely white artifactual field to presence of rare comets. Their density correlates with porosity and geometry of the phantom. In our opinion, comets represent superficial, artifactual, density and geometry correlated phenomenon due to the acoustic permeability of a broken (collapsed) specular reflector, normally present when the phantom is dry.