Category Archives: Point of Care Ultrasound

Sono Pro Tip: Going Deep

Even time you use too much depth a kitten dies…. or you greatly reduce your image quality and image the bed instead of the patient. Not only does it shrink the size of what you’re looking at, but it also moves your structure of interest out of the focal zone (you know the area of highest image resolution in the mid field of the ultrasound screen). Plus it adds poor quality images to the patient’s chart with your name, so don’t do it and think of the kittens.

Happy scanning everyone!

 

Sono Pro Tip: Distinguishing Right from Left Heart

Know your right from left heart. In a perfect world probe positioning would be right every time and you’d just know the right heart is on screen left. However no one is perfect and it’s important to know your right from left heart to prevent errors like calling right heart strain when there isn’t. Here are some tips to help (even when your image is flipped like this one):

  1. Descending thoracic aorta is associated with the left atrium
  2. Look for left ventricular outflow tract/aortic valve in left ventricle
  3. Tricuspid valve insertion onto septum is more apical
  4. Tapered right ventricle shape
  5. Moderator band is sometimes visible in the right ventricle

Happy scanning everyone!

SonoSave – It’s Just Sepsis

Hemodynamically unstable, sick patient have high mortality and morbidity. Their physical exam findings can be misleading and the diagnosis still broad or unclear even after examination. When time counts and your patient is sick, bedside ultrasound can quickly make the diagnosis to help you provide appropriate and definitive care when it matters most. This is the basis for the SonoSave series, which examines ultrasound saves and the critically ill patients alive today because of point of care ultrasound.   

Intro

Ultrasound is a lifesaver and luckily for a recent patient I mean this literally. Thanks to the early use of ultrasound a life was saved that would have been lost. A critical diagnosis was made within 5 minutes of arrival, preventing investment of precious time in ineffective treatments or delaying definitive care and making me look real slick in the process. The patient was successfully treated and admitted to the ICU. When I walk into work the next day, I find out the patient is not only alive but sitting up in bed talking to the team! With some simple ultrasound views and less than 2 minutes, the direction of our treatment completely changed and a man lived to see his family that I doubt would have otherwise. Two minutes to save a life… that’s some good stuff and even better ultrasound! These are the moments that make medicine worth it.  

That Feeling When You Walk Out of Your Shift After A Good Save Continue reading SonoSave – It’s Just Sepsis