| Literature DB >> 31799128 |
Bret P Nelson1, Sukrit Narula1, Edgar Argulian2, Anjali Bhagra3, Jagat Narula2.
Abstract
Insonation, or the use of ultrasound, has been proposed to be included in the medical school curriculum, both for education and bedside physical examination. It is important to consider what impact insonation should have on medical student education. Increasingly students are exposed to ultrasound use on clinical rotations, but to what extent should ultrasound be an integrated part of the preclinical curriculum in the United States? Ultrasound can serve to augment an existing curriculum in anatomy, physiology, physical examination, and disease assessment and treatment. In addition, the actual performance and interpretation of the insonation component of physical examination in real time may be an emerging skill set to be expected of medical students. Here we describe the utility and challenges of incorporating an ultrasound curriculum into undergraduate medical education, including examples from institutions that have pioneered this innovative curricular change. Copyright:Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31799128 PMCID: PMC6857521 DOI: 10.5334/aogh.2472
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Glob Health ISSN: 2214-9996 Impact factor: 2.462
Insonation is applicable to most medical specialties.
| Specialty | Point of Care Insonation |
|---|---|
| Anesthesia | Guidance for vascular access, regional anesthesia, intraoperative monitoring of fluid status and cardiac function |
| Cardiology | Echocardiography, intracardiac assessment |
| Critical care medicine | Procedural guidance, pulmonary assessment, focused echocardiography, hypotension evaluation |
| Dermatology | Assessment of skin lesions and tumors |
| Emergency medicine | Trauma assessment, hypotension evaluation, evaluation of ectopic pregnancy, procedural guidance |
| Endocrinology and endocrine surgery | Assessment of thyroid and parathyroid, procedural guidance |
| General surgery | Ultrasonography of the breast, procedural guidance, intraoperative assessment |
| Gynecology | Assessment of cervix, uterus, and adnexa; procedural guidance |
| Neonatology | Cranial and pulmonary assessments |
| Nephrology | Vascular access for dialysis |
| Neurology | Transcranial Doppler, peripheral-nerve evaluation |
| Obstetrics and maternal–fetal medicine | Assessment of pregnancy, detection of fetal abnormalities, procedural guidance |
| Ophthalmology | Corneal and retinal assessment |
| Orthopedic surgery | Musculoskeletal applications |
| Otolaryngology | Assessment of thyroid, parathyroid, and neck masses; procedural guidance |
| Pathology | Guidance for fine needle aspiration, biopsy |
| Pediatrics | Assessment of bladder, procedural guidance |
| Physical and rehabilitation medicine | Musculoskeletal diagnostic applications, procedure guidance |
| Pulmonary medicine | Transthoracic pulmonary assessment, endobronchial assessment, procedural guidance |
| Radiology and interventional radiology | Ultrasonography taken to the patient with interpretation at the bedside, procedural guidance |
Adapted from Moore, NEJM 2011.
Sample Longitudinal Insonation Curriculum.
| Year | Complementary coursework | Sample Topics |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | Anatomy, physiology | Ultrasound anatomy of cardiovascular system, hepatobiliary system, kidneys, bladder, etc. |
| Year 2 | Pathophysiology, Physical Examination course | Correlation of physical examination and landmark anatomy to ultrasound findings. |
| Years 3–4 | Specialty Rotations | Core topics based on specialty, such as fetal assessments in OB, cardiovascular assessments, bladder volume in Internal Medicine, Thoracic ultrasound in Intensive Care Medicine, Hepatobiliary assessments in Emergency Medicine and Surgery, etc. |