Tổng số lượt xem trang

Thứ Hai, 21 tháng 10, 2019

Top-cited publications on point-of-care ultrasound: The evolution of research trends.

Liao SF, et al. Am J Emerg Med. 2018.

Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVES: Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) has been a rapidly growing and broadly used modality in recent decades. The purpose of this study was to determine how POCUS is incorporated into clinical medicine by analyzing trends of use in the published literature.
METHODS: POCUS-related publications were retrieved from the Web of Science (WoS) database. The search results were ranked according to the number of times an article was cited during three time frames and average annual number of citations. Of the top 100 most cited publications in the four rankings, information regarding the publication journal, publication year, first author's nationality, field of POCUS application, and number of times the article was cited was recorded for trend analysis.
RESULTS: A total of 7860 POCUS-related publications were retrieved, and publications related to POCUS increased from 8 in 1990 to 754 in 2016. The top 148 cited publications from the four ranking groups were included in this study. Trauma was the leading application field in which POCUS was studied prior to 2001. After 2004, thorax, cardiovascular, and procedure-guidance were the leading fields in POCUS research. >79% (118/148) of the top-cited publications were conducted by authors in the United States, Italy, and France. The majority of publications were published in critical care medicine and emergency medicine journals.
CONCLUSIONS: In recent years, publications relating to POCUS have increased. POCUS-related research has mainly been performed in thorax, cardiovascular, and procedure-guidance ultrasonography fields, replacing trauma as the major field in which POCUS was previously studied.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

PMID

 29321113 [Indexed for MEDLINE

Thứ Tư, 16 tháng 10, 2019

Third-trimester ultrasound finds undetected fetal abnormalities.

October 15, 2019 -- Almost a quarter of fetal abnormalities are identified for the first time during routine ultrasound at 35 to 37 weeks gestation, according to a study published on October 8 in Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology.
he study results suggest that ultrasound at this juncture of pregnancy could offer women and their babies needed support, wrote a team led by Dr. Alessandra Ficara of King's College Hospital in London.
"A high proportion of fetal abnormalities are detected for the first time during a routine ultrasound examination at 35 to 37 weeks gestation," the group wrote. "Such diagnosis and subsequent management, including selection of timing and place for delivery and postnatal investigations, could potentially improve postnatal outcome."
Assessing pregnancy at 35 to 37 weeks gestation with ultrasound helps predict the development of preeclampsia and plan delivery of a baby that is small or large for their gestational age, Ficara's team noted. But ultrasound can also identify abnormalities overlooked on early ultrasound exams.
To investigate this, Ficara and colleagues included data from 52,400 single-fetus pregnancies in women undergoing routine ultrasound exams between 35 and 37 weeks gestation.
All the women had also undergone ultrasound scans at 18 to 24 weeks of pregnancy; 47,214 had scans at 11 to 13 weeks as well. The team included pregnancies that resulted in live births or stillbirths but excluded those with known chromosomal abnormalities.
Overall, incidence of fetal abnormalities was 1.9%. Of these, 67.7% were diagnosed on ultrasound during the first or second trimester, but 24.8% were diagnosed for the first time at 35 to 37 weeks.
The most common abnormalities first identified on first- or second-trimester ultrasound but confirmed on third-trimester ultrasound included the following:
  • Abdominal cyst or gastroschisis
  • Cleft lip and palate
  • Congenital pulmonary airway malformation
  • Duplex kidney
  • Hydronephrosis
  • Polydactyl
  • Talipes
  • Unilateral multicystic kidney
  • Unilateral renal agenesis and/or pelvic kidney
  • Ventricular septal defect
  • Ventriculomegaly
But a number of abnormalities were first identified on third-trimester ultrasound:
  • Arachnoid cyst
  • Duplex kidney
  • Hydronephrosis
  • Mild ventriculomegaly
  • Ovarian cyst
  • Ventricular septal defect
The study findings suggest that there's definitely a place for third-trimester ultrasound when it comes to improving pregnancy outcomes, according to the team.
"This study has highlighted the additional benefit of the late third-trimester scan in the detection of fetal abnormalities that were either missed at previous first- and second-trimester scans or became apparent only during the third trimester," the group concluded.