| Literature DB >> 33207163 |
Andrew J Goldsmith1,2, Hamid Shokoohi1,3, Michael Loesche1,2,3, Ravish C Patel3,4, Heidi Kimberly1,2, Andrew Liteplo1,3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is an essential tool in the timely evaluation of an undifferentiated patient in the emergency department (ED). Our primary objective in this study was to determine the perceived impact of POCUS in high-risk cases presented at emergency medicine (EM) morbidity and mortality (M&M) conferences. Additionally, we sought to identify in which types of patients POCUS might be most useful, and which POCUS applications were considered to be highest yield.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33207163 PMCID: PMC7673874 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2020.7.47486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Figure 1Flow diagram of morbidity and mortality cases.
POCUS, point-of-care ultrasound; M&M, morbidity and mortality.
Chief complaints or reasons for referral and vital signs of morbidity and mortality cases reviewed (N = 75).
| POCUS may have prevented M&M | Total cases (N = 75) | |
|---|---|---|
| Chief complaint | ||
| Chest pain | 75% (6/8) | 11% (8/75) |
| Procedural complication | 67% (2/3) | 4% (3/75) |
| Shortness of breath | 47% (8/17) | 23% (17/75) |
| Trauma | 36% (4/11) | 15% (11/75) |
| Altered mental status | 29% (2/7) | 9% (7/75) |
| Cardiac arrest | 22% (2/9) | 12% (9/75) |
| Abdominal pain | 17% (1/6) | 8% (6/75) |
| Other | 0% (0/8) | 11% (8/75) |
| Headache | 0% (0/4) | 5% (4/75) |
| Medication error | 0% (0/3) | 3% (2/75) |
| Vital signs | ||
| Hypoxic | 40% (8/20) | 26% (20/75) |
| Tachycardic | 30% (11/37) | 49% (37/75) |
| Febrile | 29% (2/7) | 9% (7/75) |
| Hypotensive | 26% (5/19) | 25% (19/75) |
POCUS, point-of-care ultrasound; M&M, morbidity and mortality.
Figure 2Perceived impact of point-of-care ultrasound: applications versus mechanism by which POCUS may have reduced or prevented morbidity ad mortality (N = 25 cases, multiple mechanisms per case were possible).
FAST, focused assessment with sonography in trauma.
Description of cases that POCUS may have contributed to the M&M.
| Case | Case description | Ultrasound contribution | Type of error | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Incorrectly interpreted | Incorrectly performed | Incorrectly integrated | |||
| 1 | Possible septic shock with acute on chronic RV failure. | Severe RV dysfunction correctly identified, however 4L of IVF given causing fluid overload. | X | ||
| 2 | Hemothorax. Liver injury occurred during chest tube placement. | Hemothorax correctly identified but ultrasound not used to guide chest tube placement. | X | X | |
| 3 | Persistent tachycardia. PE not considered. | RV dilatation correctly identified but not incorporated into care. | X | ||
| 4 | Hemothorax after ultrasound-guided ipsilateral central line placement. | Presumed vascular injury secondary to central venous access attempt. Unclear how procedure was done. | X | ||
| 5 | Trauma with hypotension. | +FAST correctly identified. No surgery consults until after CT. | X | ||
| 6 | Leg infection treated as cellulitis as outpatient. Returned with necrotizing fasciitis. | Ultrasound correctly identified soft tissue edema, but providers missed subcutaneous air, which was visible. | X | ||
| 7 | Shortness of breath. Pleural and pericardial effusions identified, admitted. | Pericardial effusion correctly identified, but not read as early tamponade delaying emergent consults. | X | ||
| Total (8 errors/7cases) | 25% (2/8) | 25% (2/8) | 50% (4/8) | ||
M&M, morbidity and mortality; RV, right ventricle; IVF, intravenous fluid; PE, pulmonary embolism; FAST, focused assessment with sonography in trauma; CT, computed tomography.