Liccardo B, Martone F, Trambaiolo P, Severino S, Cibinel GA, D’Andrea A. Incremental value of thoracic ultrasound in intensive care units: Indications, uses, and applications. World J Radiol 2016; 8(5): 460-471 [PMID: 27247712 DOI: 10.4329/wjr.v8.i5.460]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Antonello D’Andrea, MD, PhD, Chair of Cardiology, Second University of Naples, AORN “dei Colli”, Monaldi Hospital, Via M. Schipa, 44, 80122 Naples, Italy. antonellodandrea@libero.it
Research Domain of This Article
Cardiac & Cardiovascular Systems
Article-Type of This Article
Review
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
World J Radiol. May 28, 2016; 8(5): 460-471 Published online May 28, 2016. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v8.i5.460
Table 1 Appearance of different clinical settings
Clinical setting
Artifacts
Normal lung
Some air
Pneumothorax
Full of air
Interstitial syndrome
Air and minimal fluid
Pleural effusion
Full of fluid
Lung consolidation
Fluid and air (more fluid, tissue-like)
Table 2 Bedside Lung Ultrasound in Emergency protocol, profiles
Profile
Characteristic items
Diagnosis
A’ profile
Lack of lung sliding, and presence of lung point
Pneumothorax
B profile
Anterior lung sliding, with presence of lung comet tails
Acute pulmonary edema
B’ profile
Lung comet tails, with abolished anterior lung sliding
Pneumonia
A/B profile
Anterior predominant B lines on one side, and predominant A lines on the other
Pneumonia
C profile
Anterior alveolar consolidations
Pneumonia
A profile
Anterior lung sliding with A lines, and the presence of DVT
Pulmonary embolism
A-V-PLAPS-profile
Anterior lung sliding with A lines, PLAPS, absence of DVT
Pneumonia
Nude profile
Anterior lung sliding with A lines, absence of DVT or PLAPS
Severe asthma or exacerbated COPD
Table 3 Thoracic ultrasound advantages
Thoracic ultrasound advantages
Rapid diagnosis
No limitation with setting, patient position, or clinical conditions
Differential diagnosis (e.g., chest pain, pulmonary edema, exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, subpulmonary effusion, subphrenic fluid accumulation, and tumors)
Diagnose presence and nature of pleural effusions
Guide invasive procedures (e.g., thoracentesis, chest tube placement, and biopsy)
Diagnose diaphragm paralysis
Diagnose localized pleural tumors or pleural thickening, assess invasion of the pleura and chest wall
Diagnose pneumothorax, drainage, or verify lung expansion
Few limitations in ventilated patients
Table 4 Acute respiratory disorders
Pleural effusion
Pleural effusion is an echo-free zone (dark zone) that causes lung consolidation and floating in the pleural effusion
TUS allows the nature of the fluid to be distinguished:
Transudate: Anechoic and echo-free pattern
Exudate: Echogenic, with small moving dots (e.g., leukocytes, erythrocytes, fibrin, and protein particles), fibrous strings, and mobile or immobile septations with encapsulated liquid
TUS allows for the quantification of pleural effusion volume
Ultrasound may guide thoracentesis and biopsy of the parietal pleura
Pneumothorax
The interposition of gas between the visceral and parietal pleural layers, lack of lung sliding, and B-lines; only horizontal A-lines can be seen. Stratosphere sign is the characteristic pattern of the lack of lung sliding evaluated by M-mode. The lung point is the precise area of the chest wall where visceral and parietal pleura regain contact with each other, as well as where the regular reappearance of lung sliding replaces the pneumothorax pattern
Diaphragmatic function
A diaphragm study can be made by placing the probe below the costal margin and using M-mode to display the motion of the anatomical structures; normal inspiratory diaphragmatic movement is caudal, while normal expiratory trace is cranial. In M-mode, diaphragmatic excursion, speed of diaphragmatic contraction, inspiratory time, and duration of the cycle can be measured
Table 5 Comparative table of different acute respiratory disorders
A-lines
B-lines
Lung sliding
Pulse
Particular characteristics
Normal
Present
Rare
Present
Present
Pneumothorax
Present
Never
Absent
Absent
Lung point
Pleural effusion
Absent
Absent
Absent
Absent
Presence of B-lines in cases of concomitant interstitial syndrome or pneumonia
Interstitial syndrome
Absent
Multiple
Present
Present
B-lines crowded and confluent (white lung)
Citation: Liccardo B, Martone F, Trambaiolo P, Severino S, Cibinel GA, D’Andrea A. Incremental value of thoracic ultrasound in intensive care units: Indications, uses, and applications. World J Radiol 2016; 8(5): 460-471