| Literature DB >> 16882338 |
Mao Zhang1, Zhi-Hai Liu, Jian-Xin Yang, Jian-Xin Gan, Shao-Wen Xu, Xiang-Dong You, Guan-Yu Jiang.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Early detection of pneumothorax in multiple trauma patients is critically important. It can be argued that the efficacy of ultrasonography (US) for detection of pneumothorax is enhanced if it is performed and interpreted directly by the clinician in charge of the patients. The aim of this study was to assess the ability of emergency department clinicians to perform bedside US to detect and assess the size of the pneumothorax in patients with multiple trauma.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16882338 PMCID: PMC1751015 DOI: 10.1186/cc5004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Conventional ultrasonic signs in the lung. (a) The pleural line (black bold arrow) is a roughly horizontal hyper-echoic line between upper and lower ribs, identified by acoustic shadows (white arrow). (b) Lung-sliding is a forward-and-back movement of visceral pleura against parietal pleura in real-time motion. In time-motion mode, it includes motionless parietal tissues over the pleural line and a homogenous granular pattern below it (right image). (c) Comet-tail artifacts (white bold arrows) are hyper-echoic reverberation artifacts arising from the pleural line, laser-beam-like and spreading up to the edge of the screen.
Efficacy for diagnosing pneumothorax in multiple trauma patients by clinician-performed ultrasonography and radiography
| Parameters | Ultrasonography (%) | Radiography (%) | Comparison | ||
| Value | 95%CI | Value | 95%CI | P | |
| Sensitivity | 86.2 (25/29) | 73.7–98.8 | 27.6 (8/29) | 11.3–43.9 | <0.001 |
| Specificity | 97.2 (103/106) | 94.0–100 | 100 (106/106) | 100–100 | 0.246a |
| Positive predictive value | 89.3 (25/28) | 77.8–100 | 100 (8/8) | 100–100 | 1.0a |
| Negative predictive value | 96.3 (103/107) | 92.7–99.9 | 83.5 (106/127) | 77.0–89.9 | 0.002 |
| False positive ratio | 2.8 (3/106) | 0–6.0 | 0 (0/106) | 0–0 | 0.246a |
| False negative ratio | 13.8 (4/29) | 1.2–26.3 | 72.4 (21/29) | 56.1–88.7 | <0.001 |
| Accuracy | 94.8 (128/135) | 91.1–98.6 | 84.4 (114/135) | 78.3–90.6 | 0.005 |
aFisher's exact test. CI, confidence interval.
Concordance in size determination of pneumothorax between ultrasonography and computed tomography in 21 true positive patients
| US | Total | |||
| Chest CT | Large | Moderate | Mild | (CT) |
| Large | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Moderate | 1 | 5 | 1 | 7 |
| Mild | 0 | 2 | 10 | 12 |
| Total (US) | 3 | 7 | 11 | 21 |
Kappa agreement test: Kappa = 0.669, p < 0.001. CT, computed tomography; US, ultrasonography.
Figure 2A typical patient with pneumothorax correctly diagnosed by US and missed by CXR. This 42 year old male patient sustained injuries from a car accident, and arrived with dyspnea, tachycardia, hypotension and desaturation requiring mechanical ventilation. (a) The supine chest radiograph did not enable a diagnosis of pneumothorax. (b) A rapid exploration of the thorax by US indicated medium left pneumothorax (absence of lung-sliding), associated with left lung contusion and pleural effusion. (c) The diagnosis was confirmed afterwards by chest CT. Arterial oxygenation was improved after chest tube placement.