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HG U/S Course Prep #2: Lung Ultrasound
Dr. Caroline Walker March 23, 2018
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Practice Changing
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Intro to lung ultrasound
How to get started Pneumothorax Pulmonary edema Pleural effusion
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Why do lung ultrasound? Technically easy
Superior diagnostic tool to CXR in majority of instances Integrate with other ultrasound skills (IVC/echo/FAST) to systematically evaluate undifferentiated sick patients Target resuscitation Save lives! Let your x-ray tech sleep…
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Probes of choice: Pros and Cons
Phased Array Small footprint = Visualize in rib space (matters more for cardiac views) Low Hx; Deep penetration ideal for lung artefact Curvilinear Array Low Hz; Deep penetration Easy transition from FAST to e-FAST and advantage of single probe Linear Array Higher Hz = better near field resolution Good for assessing pleura
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Non-Anatomic Images
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Lung ultrasound = mostly artifact
In a healthy lung you do not see the anatomy due to air scatter “A” lines - normal horizontal lines that represent reverberation artifact from the pleural line “A” lines = air filled lung
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Technique Probe in long axis Indicator to patient head
Perpendicular to chest wall Pleural lines will be as close to near field as possible Will see either A line or B line pattern
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Pneumothorax POCUS Better test than a chest x-ray!
Comparing POCUS vs supine CXR in traumatic pneumothorax Sensitivity for u/s: 98% (CXR: 28-75%) Specificity for u/s: % (CXR: 100%)
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Primary Question: Is there lung sliding?
If there is lung sliding there is no pneumothorax at that location Excellent RULE OUT test NO lung sliding can mean: Pneumothorax COPD blebs Pleurodesis/other pleural conditions Post pneumonectomy Mainstem intubation Dense pneumonia (consolidated lung not inflating) Apnea Technique: Check most non-dependent areas (air rises)
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The “sea shore” sign = lung sliding present
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The “stratosphere” or “bar code” sign = lung sliding absent
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The Lung Point = Pathognomonic for PTX
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Pneumothorax
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Lung point = Rule IN PTX (100% specific)
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Be sure you are looking at the pleural line!
Subcutaneous emphysema - Irregular (not like pleural line) - Too superficial to be pleural line
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B-lines A fluid-air artifact
’B’ lines = Something going on in the alveoli and interstitium (edema, fibrosis)
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B-line Characteristics
Arises from the pleural line Well defined and laser-like Hyperechoic Long, spreading out without fading to the edge of the screen Erases the A-lines Moves with lung-sliding (if present)
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Technique Phased or curvilinear array Increase depth to 15 cm
Probe perpendicular to chest wall Scan in 4 regions (supine patient)
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All about the B-lines Originates from fluid/fibrosis of interlobular septae Isolated B-lines in dependent area is normal finding 3 or more B-lines in one lung region is abnormal Distribution helps your diagnosis RULES OUT pneumothorax in that area
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B-line pattern: stuff in the alveoli/interlobular septae
Diffuse B-lines Pulmonary edema Pulmonary fibrosis Focal B-lines Pneumonia ARDS Pulmonary contusion Pulmonary hemorrhage
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B-lines to guide resuscitation
Undifferentiated hypotensive patient, can use lung US to guide resus A line pattern: no pulmonary edema, consider more fluid Correlates with low pulmonary artery wedge pressure B line pattern: be cautious about more fluid, consider transition to pressors
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Pleural Effusion POCUS
Much more sensitive than CXR, as good as CT Assists thoracentesis (much safer!) RUQ and LUQ FAST scan locations then move superiorly Generally see hypoechoic fluid (obvious); not always (clot, pus) May cause compressive atelectasis “The Spine Sign” – fluid transmits sound, will generate image of vertebrae through the lung (not normal)
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“Jellyfish sign”
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Integration: BLUE Protocol (Lichtenstein) Acute Dyspnea NYD
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Summary A-lines: normal parenchyma B-lines: stuff in the interstitium
Lung sliding: Rule OUT pneumothorax, Lung point rule IN Pleural effusion: Spine sign Can guide Dx and resuscitation THANK YOU!
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