Literature DB >> 27460103

Inter-Rater Agreement of Auscultation, Palpable Fremitus, and Ventilator Waveform Sawtooth Patterns Between Clinicians.

Marc P Berry1, Joan-Daniel Martí2, George Ntoumenopoulos3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Clinicians often use numerous bedside assessments for secretion retention in participants who are receiving invasive mechanical ventilation. This study aimed to evaluate inter-rater agreement between clinicians when using standard clinical assessments of secretion retention and whether differences in clinician experience influenced inter-rater agreement.
METHODS: Seventy-one mechanically ventilated participants were assessed by a research clinician and by one of 13 ICU clinicians. Each clinician conducted a standardized assessment of lung auscultation, palpation for chest-wall (rhonchal) fremitus, and ventilator inspiratory/expiratory flow-time waveforms for the sawtooth pattern.
RESULTS: On the presence of breath sounds, agreement ranged from absolute to moderate in the upper zones and the lower zones, respectively. Kappa values for abnormal and adventitious lung sounds achieved moderate agreement in the upper zones, less than chance agreement to substantial agreement in the middle zones, and moderate agreement to almost perfect agreement in the lower zones. Moderate to almost perfect agreement was established for palpable fremitus in the upper zones, moderate to substantial agreement in the middle zones, and less than chance to moderate agreement in the lower zones. Inter-rater agreement on the presence of expiratory sawtooth pattern identification showed moderate agreement. The level of percentage agreement between the research and ICU clinicians for each respiratory assessment studied did not relate directly to level of clinical experience.
CONCLUSIONS: Inter-rater agreement for all assessments showed variability between lung regions but maintained reasonable percentage agreement in mechanically ventilated participants. The level of percentage agreement achieved between clinicians did not directly relate to clinical experience for all respiratory assessments. Therefore, these respiratory assessments should not necessarily be viewed in isolation but interpreted within the context of a full clinical assessment.
Copyright © 2016 by Daedalus Enterprises.

Entities:  

Keywords:  auscultation; critical care; humans; mechanical; observer variation; palpation; respiratory sounds; ventilators

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27460103     DOI: 10.4187/respcare.04214

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Respir Care        ISSN: 0020-1324            Impact factor:   2.258


  2 in total

1.  Locating stridor caused by tumor compression by using a multichannel electronic stethoscope: a case report.

Authors:  Fushun Hsu; Cheng-Hung How; Shang-Ran Huang; Yi-Tsun Chen; Jin-Shing Chen; Ho-Tsung Hsin
Journal:  J Clin Monit Comput       Date:  2020-05-09       Impact factor: 2.502

2.  Benchmarking of eight recurrent neural network variants for breath phase and adventitious sound detection on a self-developed open-access lung sound database-HF_Lung_V1.

Authors:  Fu-Shun Hsu; Shang-Ran Huang; Chien-Wen Huang; Chao-Jung Huang; Yuan-Ren Cheng; Chun-Chieh Chen; Jack Hsiao; Chung-Wei Chen; Li-Chin Chen; Yen-Chun Lai; Bi-Fang Hsu; Nian-Jhen Lin; Wan-Ling Tsai; Yi-Lin Wu; Tzu-Ling Tseng; Ching-Ting Tseng; Yi-Tsun Chen; Feipei Lai
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-07-01       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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