| Literature DB >> 29043420 |
Jacob A M Stadler1, Savvas Andronikou2,3,4, Heather J Zar5,6.
Abstract
Ultrasound (US) has been proposed as an alternative first-line imaging modality to diagnose community-acquired pneumonia in children. Lung US has the potential benefits over chest radiography of being radiation free, subject to fewer regulatory requirements, relatively lower cost and with immediate bedside availability of results. However, the uptake of lung US into clinical practice has been slow and it is not yet included in clinical guidelines for community-acquired pneumonia in children. The aim of this review is to give an overview of the equipment and techniques used to perform lung US in children with suspected pneumonia and the interpretation of relevant sonographic findings. We also summarise the current evidence of diagnostic accuracy and reliability of lung US compared to alternative imaging modalities in children and critically consider the strengths and limitations of lung US for use in children presenting with suspected community-acquired pneumonia.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Community-acquired pneumonia; Lung; Pneumonia; Ultrasound
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29043420 PMCID: PMC5608773 DOI: 10.1007/s00247-017-3910-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Radiol ISSN: 0301-0449
Fig. 1An ultrasound image from the right anterior upper lung zone in a 16-month-old girl demonstrates normal lung echo pattern with a smooth, hyperechoic pleural line, A-lines and no B-lines
Fig. 2An ultrasound image from the left anterior lower lung zone in a 2-year-old boy who presented with symptoms of pneumonia shows multiple and confluent B-lines in a single view representing an interstitial disease pattern
Fig. 3An ultrasound image from the right posterior upper lung zone in a 3-month-old girl hospitalised with pneumonia shows a wedge-shaped hypoechoic area of subpleural consolidation. Associated features that can be seen are air bronchograms represented by punctate hyperechoic specs within the lesion, a hypoechoic pleural line over the lesion and multiple B-lines that arise from the deep edge of the consolidation rather than from the pleura
Summary of recent studies investigating the use of lung ultrasound (LUS) for diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in children
| Author |
| Clinical setting | LUS definition for CAP | CXR definition for CAP | Final diagnosis of CAP (Reference standard for calculating sensitivity and specificity) | Main outcomes reported | Results | Main limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 106 | Hospital | Consolidation with or without bronchograms. | Consolidation; patchy infiltrates; interstitial infiltrates; pleural effusion. | CXR | Detection rates and agreement compared between CXR and LUS. | CXR+: 76/106 | CXR used as reference standard. |
|
| 163 | Hospital (paediatric ward and ICU) | Consolidation with bronchograms; pleural effusion. | Radiologist opinion (detail not specified). | Sensitivity and specificity not reported. | Detection rates and agreement compared between CXR and LUS. | CXR+: 152/163 (0.93) | Possible selection bias: included only hospitalised cases. |
|
| 84 | Hospital ER | Consolidation and interstitial syndrome. | Air-space consolidation and interstitial disease pattern. | Sensitivity and specificity not reported. | Detection rates and agreement compared between CXR and LUS. | CXR+ rate: 47/84 | Relatively small sample size. |
|
| 222 | Hospital ER | Consolidation with air bronchograms. | Parenchymal consolidation or focal ground-glass opacity. | Sensitivity and specificity not reported. | Detection rates and agreement compared between CXR and LUS. | CXR+: 197/222 | Possible selection bias: included only cases referred to hospital and further excluded mild cases. |
|
| 69 | Hospital ER | Alveolar or interstitial disease pattern. | Alveolar or interstitial disease pattern. | Expert opinion based on overall clinical picture. | Sensitivity, specificity and ROC curve. | CXR sensitivity: 96% | Subjective reference standard. |
|
| 143 | Hospital ER | Air-space consolidation. | Air-space consolidation | CXR (consolidation only). | Agreement, sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values and ROC curve. | Sensitivity: 98% | CXR used as reference standard. |
CXR chest radiography, ER emergency room, F female, ICU intensive care unit, M male, ROC receiver operating characteristic