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Thứ Hai, 24 tháng 2, 2014

Point-of-Care Ultrasound for Suspected Appendicitis in Children Deemed Effective Front-Line Tool



Point-of-Care Ultrasound for Suspected Appendicitis in Children Deemed Effective Front-Line Tool

By Medimaging International staff writers
Posted on 17 Feb 2014




Image: A recent study showed portable ultrasound used as a first-line imaging tool in children with suspected appendicitis helps cut emergency room length of stay and reduces the need for computed tomography (CT) scanning (Photo courtesy of James W. Tsung, M.D / Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai).

Portable ultrasound used as a first-line imaging tool in children with suspected appendicitis helps cut emergency room length of stay and reduces the need for computed tomography (CT) scanning. Bedside ultrasound, also known to as point-of-care (POC) ultrasonography, has a specificity of about 94%, according to recent research.

The study’s findings were published online February 2014 in the journal Academic Emergency Medicine. “From an institutional perspective, this is the most common surgical problem that we encounter with children in the emergency department,” said the study’s senior author, James W. Tsung, MD, MPH, associate professor of emergency medicine and pediatrics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (New York, NY, USA). “CT scans have been the best imaging test for diagnosing appendicitis, but they expose children to radiation, which cumulatively can prove harmful, as increasing numbers of studies have shown.”

Several studies have reported lifetime risks of cancer from abdominal and pelvis CT scanning in children results in one cancer death for every 500 to 3,000 CT scans ordered, depending on age and sex. Efforts to try to reduce the four million radiation-emitting CT scans obtained in children annually are underway, led by front-line radiologists, physicians, and radiologic professional societies. “CT scanning rate was reduced by over 35%, from a 44% CT scan rate prior to the study to a 27% rate during the study,” commented Ee Tay, MD, assistant professor of emergency medicine and pediatrics, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and the study’s second author.

Investigators, in their research, used a prospective observational sample of 150 children seen consecutively between May 1, 2011 and October 1, 2012 in an urban pediatric emergency department. All children were under evaluation for suspected appendicitis. Outcomes were determined by surgical or pathology report in those found to have appendicitis and three weeks later in patients who were considered not to have appendicitis. Operator accuracy reading the ultrasound scans was reviewed in a blinded fashion by trained pediatric emergency medicine sonologists. The time to perform the POC ultrasound and CT scan use was measured.

The study’s findings revealed that emergency department length of stay decreased by two hours and 14 minutes (46% decrease) for those requiring radiology department ultrasound and almost six hours (68% decrease) for those requiring CT scanning when POC ultrasound was inconclusive as a first-line imaging study. Significantly, no instances of appendicitis were overlooked with the POC ultrasound protocol and no needless surgeries were performed for a normal appendix. Pediatric emergency clinicians, with the use of focused ultrasound training, were able to assess ultrasound exams with the similar accuracy as radiologists (approximately 94% accuracy). Dr. Tsung noted, “Surgeons are becoming more comfortable using ultrasound for decision-making and that is a big change from reliance on CT scans.”

The Mt. Sinai division of emergency ultrasound is involved with an effort to educate providers to use safer ultrasound as a faster first-line study in children.

Related Links:

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Thứ Sáu, 21 tháng 2, 2014

Canadian ob/gyns, rads target entertainment ultrasound


Canadian ob/gyns, rads target entertainment ultrasound
By Erik L. Ridley, AuntMinnie staff writer

February 20, 2014 -- The growing use of fetal ultrasound for nonmedical purposes has prompted two Canadian medical societies to issue a statement against the scans, which have been linked to gender-specific abortion in the country.


The Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada (SOGC) and the Canadian Association of Radiologists (CAR) issued a joint policy statement in the Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Canada indicating their strong opposition to the nonmedical use of fetal ultrasound. The statement encouraged governments to join with them "to find appropriate means to deal with this public health issue."

Sex-selective abortion as a result of fetal ultrasound scans has long been a problem in developing countries such as India and China, where it has resulted in lopsided male-to-female ratios among the general population. But the problem is believed to be spreading to some developed countries such as Canada and the U.S. that have large immigrant communities.

The problem has been exacerbated by the rise of nonmedical ultrasound centers that offer "entertainment" scans, such as keepsake ultrasound images provided to expecting parents. Recent media coverage has highlighted the role of first-trimester gender determination by these centers in contributing to gender-specific abortion.

As a result, SOGC and CAR updated their individual policy statements on this issue with a new joint policy statement. The joint statement was prepared by the SOGC Diagnostic Imaging Committee and the CAR Point of Care Ultrasound Working Group, and it was approved by SOGC's executive council and CAR's board of directors (J Obstet Gynaecol Can, February 2014, Vol. 36:2, pp. 184-185).

While there is no definitive evidence that diagnostic ultrasound produces fetal abnormalities or harmful effects, studies of the biological effects of ultrasound in humans and in animal models indicate a theoretical risk, according to the organizations. For example, recent studies in animal models reported subtle effects on fetal brain physiology and development.

Nonmedical fetal ultrasound raises a number of safety concerns, according to the organizations.

"With the nonmedical use of fetal ultrasound, the maintenance of technical safeguards, operator training, qualifications, expertise, standards for infection control, and governing competency are no longer ensured," they said in the statement. "As a result, fetal energy exposure may not be appropriately monitored, and operators of the equipment may not be adequately trained to recognize fetal and placental abnormalities that may adversely affect fetal and maternal outcomes."

Other potential harms include false-positive diagnoses that lead to unnecessary investigations and anxiety, as well as false reassurance to the patient that everything is "normal," according to the organizations. Physical harm could also result if unsafe levels of abdominal pressure and fetal maneuvering are applied to obtain a suitable commercial product.

"The fetus should not be exposed to ultrasound for commercial and entertainment purposes, and it could be considered unethical to perform these scans," they wrote.

SOGC and CAR noted that both Health Canada and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration have recommended against the practice of commercial or entertainment ultrasound studies. Specifically, Health Canada recommends that ultrasound should not be performed in the following circumstances:

To take a picture of the fetus solely for nonmedical reasons
To learn the sex of the fetus solely for nonmedical reasons
For commercial purposes, such as the display of pictures or videos of a fetus at trade shows
"SOGC and CAR support the Health Canada recommendations and recommend that ultrasound be used prudently and only by qualified health professionals and that energy exposure be limited to the minimum that is medically necessary," according to the statement. "This technology should not be used for the sole purpose of determining fetal gender without a medical indication for that scan."

Related Reading
Report ties keepsake ultrasound to fetal gender tests in Canada, June 15, 2012

Toronto Star: Hospitals won't reveal baby's gender on US, April 18, 2012

AIUM: Keepsake US tied to low birth-gender ratios in Calif., April 3, 2012

Does keepsake ultrasound lead to gender abortions in Calif.?, March 30, 2010

Fetal entertainment ultrasounds draw patient interest, March 20, 2007


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Last Updated np 2/20/2014 11:45:14 AM
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