| Literature DB >> 27588206 |
Abstract
There has been an explosion of knowledge and application of clinical lung ultrasound (LUS) in the last decade. LUS has important applications in the ambulatory, emergency, and critical care settings and its deployability for immediate bedside assessment allows many acute lung conditions to be diagnosed and early interventional decisions made in a matter of minutes. This review detailed the scientific basis of LUS, the examination techniques, and summarises the current applications in several acute lung conditions. It is to be hoped that clinicians, after reviewing the evidence within this article, would see LUS as an important first-line modality in the primary evaluation of an acutely dyspneic patient.Entities:
Keywords: A-lines; B-lines; Curtain sign; I-lines; Lung ultrasound; Z-lines
Year: 2016 PMID: 27588206 PMCID: PMC5007698 DOI: 10.1186/s40560-016-0180-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
Fig. 2Comparing two scanning planes in LUS. a LUS performed in the longitudinal or cranio-caudal plane showed ribs (thin arrows) and their acoustic shadows (S). Just below the level of the ribs is the pleural line (thick arrow) and the sonographic lung field (SLF). b Subcutaneous tissue lines (arrowhead) could be mistaken for the pleural line (arrow) when LUS is performed in a transverse plane, without the guidance of the rib structure
Fig. 1Scanning sectors (as used at the author’s centre). Zones on the right hemithorax. a R1 right anterior upper zone, R2 right anterior lower zone, Rs right supraclavicular fossa b R3 right lateral axilla zone, R4 right lateral lower zone c R5 right posterior upper zone R6 right posterior lower zone. I, II, III, IV first, second, third, fourth ribs, respectively, H horizontal fissure, O oblique fissure, C costophrenic recess, lowest limit of LUS study where curtain sign is found, *inferior angle of scapula
Detailed descriptions of scanning sectors in LUS
| Chest | Sector | Boundaries | Anatomical/study significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anterior | R1 or LI (anterior upper) | Upper: clavicle; lower: 4th rib; medial: sternal edge; lateral: defined by LUS image of lung; beyond this border are contents of the axilla and clavipectoral triangle | • Horizontal fissure is in line with the 4th rib; therefore, this zone contains the upper lobe of the lung |
| R2 or L2 (anterior lower) | Upper: 4th rib; lower: variable, depending on body habitus and defined by curtain sign in LUS and appearance of abdominal contents;liver on the right side, bowel and spleen on the left; medial: sternal edge; lateral: anterior axillary line | • The 6th rib approximates the inferior most part of the lung and anterior insertion of diaphragm (not seen in normal LUS with curtain sign). Beyond the 6th rib is the potential space: costophrenic recess | |
| Rs or Ls supraclavicular fossa | Triangle formed by the clavicle, lower parts of sternomastoid and trapezius | • Optional study area for the following: first rib; apical pneumothorax; pulmonary tuberculosis | |
| Lateral | R3 or L3 lateral axilla | Upper: axilla; lower: the axis of the 4th rib; anterior: anterior axillary line; posterior: posterior axillary line | • This sector contains primarily the upper lobe of the lung with a small portion of the lower lobe |
| R4 or L4 lateral lower | Upper: the axis of the 4th rib; lower: variable, depending on body habitus. Defined by curtain sign in LUS; anterior: anterior axillary line; posterior: posterior axillary line | • This sector contains primarily the lower lobe of the lung | |
| Posterior | R5 or L5 posterior upper | Upper: defined by LUS image of the lung; medial: thoracic spine; lateral: medial border of scapula; lower: level of the inferior angle of the scapula | • This sector contains the upper lobe and lower lobe of the lung in almost equal proportion |
| R6 or L6 posterior lower | Upper: level of the inferior angle of the scapula; medial: thoracic spine | • This sector contains primarily the lower lobe of the lung |
Fig. 3Two different appearances of air in LUS. a A hyperehoic appearance of lung air without A-lines. b LUS appearance with A-lines (solid arrows). The distance between the A-lines (dashed arrow) is equal to that between the transducer and the pleural line (dotted arrow). A-lines, other than that indicating a strong reflector is present, have no clinical significance
Fig. 4Vertical artifacts in LUS. a Lung comet (thin arrows) or I-lines arising from the pleural line (thick arrows) as seen with a high-frequency transducer at 8.5 MHz. b Static reverberation artifacts or Z-lines (dotted arrows) within the SLF are weak images with no relationship with the pleural line (thick arrow) and fades with depth. c A strong ring-down artifact or B-line (asterisk) starts from the pleural line (thick arrow) and reaches the depths without fading. It also swings side to side with lung sliding
Basic LUS artifacts: a comparative summary
| A-lines | Lung comets (l-lines) | Z-lines | B-lines | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Artifact generation mechanism | Repetition: Long-paths reflections between transducer and reflector. | Reverberation: Short-paths reflections within tissue structures or materials. | Ring-down: Bubble-tetrahedron mechanism. | |
| Characteristics | Short, repetitive equidistance horizontal lines. Fades with increasing depth. | Weak vertical artifacts comprising of irregularly spaced horizontal lines. Artifacts are often of variable length and fades with increasing depth. This is the typical description of a comet-tail artifact. | Strong narrow vertical artifact comprising of tightly spaced short horizontal lines. Artifact starts from point of origin to the end of the ultrasound screen. Does not fade with increasing depth. This is the typical description of a ring-down artifact. | |
| Artifact generation mechanism in LUS | Ultrasound encounters the pleural line (strong reflector). | Created in the lung interstitial or in the? Interpleural layer. | Originate from an extra-pulmonary location probably between the parietal pleural and the endothoracic fascia. | Created by “thickened” lung interstitia and interlobular structures near lung surface parenchyma. |
| Additional characteristics in LUS | Found within SLF. | Weak vertical artifact readily found within SLF with high-frequency transducers. | Found within SLF | Found within SLF. |
| Significance | Signifies ultrasound interaction with a highly reflective surface. No diagnostic significance. | Signifies that the pleural layers are in contact. Important in pneumothorax diagnosis. As they are commonly found in the normal lung. Cannot be used for diagnosis of lung interstitial diseases. | No clinical significance. The uninitiated may mistake these for B-lines. | When more than 3 per SLF, may signify an interstitial disease process. Important in LUS diagnosis. |
| Mimics in LUS | Linear foreign body in subcutaneous area. | • Pockets of air in the subcutaneous tissue may give rise to reverberation artifacts, crossing the pleura lines and into the SLF. These are also called E-Lines or “emphysema lines” [ | • Subcutaneous emphysema could generate this artifact, originating from the subcutaneous area, instead of the SLF. | Pockets of air in the subcutaneous tissue may give rise to ring-down artifacts, crossing the pleura lines and into the SLF. These are also called E-lines in Lichtenstein's publications [ |
| Other common names (better terms in italics) | Reverberation artifact. | Comet-tails, |
| Comet-tails, lung comets |
As could be seen from this matrix, many lung conditions share similar LUS signs. It is the knowledge of extent, combination, and distribution of the lung signs that will help achieve a more accurate diagnosis. Legends: bilateral—seen in both left and right lung; symmetrical—distribution pattern in left and right lungs are similar; patchy—uneven distribution within one lung where one part of the lung is involved while others spared; focal—localised to one area of the lung, one lobe or one lung; normal (for pleural line)—thin and smooth appearance; uneven—pleural line of varying thickness
Fig. 5Curtain sign. a Chest X-ray illustrates the extent (dotted line) to which the lower parts of the lung (open arrow) cover the abdomen. b LUS shows the pleural line (solid arrow) ends abruptly with an edge (thin arrow) forming an acoustic shadow, the “curtain sign,” which slides over the liver (L) with respiration. The lateral diaphragm is always hidden by the curtain and not seen in normal LUS. c An example of an abnormal curtain sign: a small effusion (E) causing an incomplete “curtain” sign (thin arrow) and exposing the lateral diaphragm (dotted arrow)
Fig. 6Pathological processes of lung disease and injury. This summarises some of the common endpoints of the pathological processes of lung disease and injury. The endpoints result in discernible features (yellow boxes) in LUS
Causes of loss of lung sliding
| Pleural separation | Pleural adhesions | Non-ventilation |
|---|---|---|
| Pneumothorax | Inflammatory adhesions | Apnea |
Fig. 7M-mode studies of lung sliding. a A proper M-mode study begins with the cursor (vertical line) centred over the SLF. The pleural line (thick arrow) separates the extra-pulmonary soft tissues (ST) and the SLF. b The M-mode showing “seashore” sign, where the quiet ST tracing (“sea”) is separated by the pleura line (thick arrow) from the noisy SLF tracing (“sandy shore”), caused by lung sliding. At regular intervals, the lung pulse (thin arrows) is seen. c M-mode showing “stratosphere” sign. The SLF tracing is “quiet” as there is no activity (lung sliding) at pleural line. There is also no lung pulse in this image
Fig. 8Examples of conditions with B-lines. a Pneumonia with several LUS features: B-lines (asterisk) of uneven spacing, a small consolidation (arrow), and small effusion (dotted arrow). b Cardiogenic pulmonary edema with many evenly spaced B-lines (asterisk) banded together into a thick sheet. Note the smooth and thin pleural line (thin arrow). c ARDS with dense B-lines involving two intercostal spaces (1, 2). Note that an area in 1 (arrow) is spared, indicating the patchy distribution of the disease process. The pleura is thickened and uneven (dotted arrow)
Conditions producing pathological B-lines
| Fluid | |
| Cardiogenic pulmonary edema | |
| Fluid overload states | |
| Inflammatory | |
| Acute lung injury/pneumonitis | |
| Acute respiratory distress syndrome | |
| Pneumonia | |
| Fibrosis | |
| Pulmonary fibrosis | |
| Chronic interstitial lung disease | |
| Trauma | |
| Pulmonary contusion | |
| Blast lung |
Other signs described in pleural effusion [8, 37, 38]
| Signs | Cause | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Quad sign | Pleural effusion | Shape of effusion collection |
| Spine sign | Large effusion | Large effusion allowing visualisation of the spine |
| Plankton sign | Blood, fibrin | Hemothorax, exudate |
| Air-fluid level | Air | Air within effusion |
| Jellyfish sign | Compressive atelectasis | No consolidation of underlying lung |
| Sinusoid sign | Jellyfish sign in M-mode | No consolidation of underlying lung |
| Suspended microbubble sign | Air within lung abscess | Distinguish lung abscess from empyema |
Fig. 9Features of consolidation. a Small consolidations appearing as subpleural defects (arrow). Ring-down artifacts or B-lines are also present (asterisks) b Wedge-shaped hypoechoic consolidations with trapped air within (thin arrow) and shred sign (thick arrow). A normal looking pleural line (open arrow head) and a thickened uneven pleural line (arrowhead) are shown. c A larger consolidation showing shred sign (thick arrow) and air bronchogram (thin arrow). Because this occurs at the lung base, the diaphragm (dotted arrow) is shown and hence the curtain sign is loss. d A lobar consolidation at the lung base showing air bronchogram (thin arrow), diaphragm (dotted arrow), and spine sign (arrowhead)
Fig. 10Atelectasis. Hypoechoic homogenous lesion at the lung base with air bronchogram (thin arrow) and shred sign (thick arrow). The diaphragm (dotted arrow) is seen as the curtain sign is lost
The lung signs matrix
| Diagnosis | Lung signs distribution | Lung sliding | Pleural line | B-lines | Effusion | Consolidation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute pulmonary oedema/fluid overload states | Bilateral/symmetrical | Present | Normal | Bilateral/symmetrical | Often present | No |
| Acute respiratory distress syndrome | Bilateral/asymmetrical/patchy | Present/may be absent in severe states | Thickened/uneven | Patchy distribution | May be found | Yes |
| Bacterial pneumonia | Usually unilateral/focal/patchy | Present/may be absent in severe states | Thickened/uneven | Focal | May be found/empyema | Yes |
| Viral/atypical pneumonia | Bilateral/asymmetrical/patchy | Present/may be absent in severe states | Thickened/uneven | Patchy distribution | May be found | Yes |
| Acute interstitial lung disease | Bilateral/asymmetrical/patchy | Present/may be absent in severe states | Thickened/uneven | Patchy distribution | May be found | Yes |
| Pneumothorax | Focal/starts with upper lung | Absent | Normal | No | No | No |
| COPD exacerbation/asthma | – | Present | Normal | No | No | No |
| Acute pulmonary infarction | Focal | Present/may be absent | Normal/may be thickened | No | May be found | Yes—at late stage |
| Atelectasis | Focal | Absent | Normal | No | May be found | Yes—at late stage |