| Literature DB >> 24730637 |
Takashi Hishitani1, Yoshitaka Fujimoto, Yukinori Saito, Kenji Sugamoto, Kenji Hoshino, Kiyoshi Ogawa.
Abstract
We verified the feasibility of telediagnosis of fetal disease by (i) grading telediagnosis by a pediatric cardiologist into five confidence levels; and (ii) comparison of fetal telediagnosis with hands-on fetal diagnosis or postnatal diagnosis. In 114 patients suspected of having heart disease (real time, n = 15; recorded image transmission, n = 99), 79 patients were in level 5 (excellent), 17 in level 4 (good), eight in level 3 (fair), 10 in level 2 (poor), and no patients in level 1 (bad). The average was 4.5, and in 96 patients (84% of all) telediagnosis was accurate (above 4), whereas in 18 patients it was inaccurate (level 2 or 3). In re-examination of 25 patients, telediagnosis was confirmed in patients in level 4 and 5, whereas heart disease was missed in patients in levels 2 or 3. The correct diagnosis matched the high confidence level of a specialist based on recognizable transmitted images.Entities:
Keywords: fetal cardiac screening; fetal diagnosis; medical link; telediagnosis; ultrasound diagnosis
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24730637 DOI: 10.1111/ped.12318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Int ISSN: 1328-8067 Impact factor: 1.524