OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to investigate whether sports medicine physicians can use portable echocardiography to obtain measurements pertinent to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. METHODS: Thirty male collegiate athletes, aged 18 to 21 years, were prospectively enrolled. Focused portable echocardiography was performed by a board-certified sports medicine physician and a resident physician, followed by comprehensive echocardiography within 2 weeks by a registered diagnostic cardiac sonographer. A left parasternal long-axis view was acquired to measure 3 dimensions: (1) end-diastolic interventricular septal thickness (IVSd), (2) end-diastolic left ventricular internal diameter (LVIDd), and (3) end-diastolic left ventricular posterior wall thickness (LVPWd). RESULTS: Intraclass correlation coefficients between the sports medicine physician and the sonographer were strong: 0.77 for IVSd, 0.73 for LVIDd, and 0.64 for LVPWd. Intraclass correlation coefficients between measurements by the resident physician and sonographer were strong to moderate: 0.61 for IVSd, 0.62 for LVIDd, and 0.63 for LVPWd. Across all 3 readers, intraclass correlation coefficient calculations were 0.77 for IVSd, 0.81 LVIDd, and 0.75 for LVPWd, which indicated strong inter-rater reliability. CONCLUSIONS: Sports medicine physicians are able to obtain measurements relevant to the diagnosis of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with focused portable echocardiography that are consistent with comprehensive echocardiography by a registered sonographer.
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to investigate whether sports medicine physicians can use portable echocardiography to obtain measurements pertinent to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. METHODS: Thirty male collegiate athletes, aged 18 to 21 years, were prospectively enrolled. Focused portable echocardiography was performed by a board-certified sports medicine physician and a resident physician, followed by comprehensive echocardiography within 2 weeks by a registered diagnostic cardiac sonographer. A left parasternal long-axis view was acquired to measure 3 dimensions: (1) end-diastolic interventricular septal thickness (IVSd), (2) end-diastolic left ventricular internal diameter (LVIDd), and (3) end-diastolic left ventricular posterior wall thickness (LVPWd). RESULTS: Intraclass correlation coefficients between the sports medicine physician and the sonographer were strong: 0.77 for IVSd, 0.73 for LVIDd, and 0.64 for LVPWd. Intraclass correlation coefficients between measurements by the resident physician and sonographer were strong to moderate: 0.61 for IVSd, 0.62 for LVIDd, and 0.63 for LVPWd. Across all 3 readers, intraclass correlation coefficient calculations were 0.77 for IVSd, 0.81 LVIDd, and 0.75 for LVPWd, which indicated strong inter-rater reliability. CONCLUSIONS: Sports medicine physicians are able to obtain measurements relevant to the diagnosis of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with focused portable echocardiography that are consistent with comprehensive echocardiography by a registered sonographer.
Authors: Jon Steller; Bianca Russell; Shahram Lotfipour; Graciela Maldonado; Tim Siepel; Halsey Jakle; Stacy Hata; Alan Chiem; John Christian Fox Journal: West J Emerg Med Date: 2014-01-09
Authors: Roman Leischik; Birgit Dworrak; Peter Foshag; Markus Strauss; Norman Spelsberg; Henning Littwitz; Marc Horlitz Journal: J Clin Med Res Date: 2015-04-08