Title: Emergency Ultrasound in Trauma
1Emergency Ultrasound in Trauma
- Anthony J Weekes MD, RDMS
- Janet G. Alteveer, MD
- Sarah Stahmer, MD
2Clinical Case
- GR is a 62 y male who hit his right torso when he
slipped on an icy sidewalk. He denies head
trauma, and can walk without a limp. Two hours
later the pain in his lower chest has increased
he comes to the ED.
3Clinical Case
- PE BP116/72, pulse109, RR 24.
- There is a minor abrasion to right lateral chest,
which is tender to palpation. Diffuse mild
abdominal tenderness. - Meds Coumadin for irregular heartbeat
4Clinical Case
- 2 large IVs placed, CXR done. Blood tests sent.
- Bedside ultrasound done.
- CXR revealed lower rib fractures, no HTX or PTX
5Clinical Case
- FFP ordered and OR notified.
- He is found to have a liver laceration and 500 cc
of blood in the peritoneal cavity.
6Diagnostic Modalities in Blunt Abdominal Trauma
- Diagnostic Peritoneal Lavage (DPL)
- CAT Scan
- Ultrasound (FAST exam)
7Diagnostic Peritoneal Lavage
- Advantages
- Very sensitive for identifying intra-peritoneal
blood - 106 RBC/mm3 approx. 20 ml blood in 1L lavage
fluid - Can be done at the bedside
- Can be done in 10-15 minutes
- Disadvantages
- Overly sensitive, may result in too high a
laparotomy rate - Invasive
- Difficult in pregnancy, or with many prior
surgeries - Can not be repeated
8CT Scan
- Advantages
- Identifies specific injuries
- Good for hollow viscus and retroperitoneal injury
- High sensitivity and specificity
- Disadvantages
- Expensive equipment
- 30-60 minutes to complete study
- Only for stable patients
- Not for pregnant patients
9 Focused Abdominal Sonography in Trauma
10FAST
- Advantages
- Can be performed in 5 minutes at the bedside
- Non-invasive
- Repeat exams
- Sensitivity and specificity for free fluid equal
to DPL and CT
- Disadvantages
- Operator dependent
- May not identify specific injury
- Poor for hollow viscus or retroperitoneal injury
- Obesity, subcutaneous air may interfere with exam
11FAST Principles
- Detects free intraperitoneal fluid
- Blood/fluid pools in dependent areas
- Pelvis
- Most dependent
- Hepatorenal fossa
- Most dependent area in supramesocolic region
12FAST Principles
- Pelvis and Supra-mesocolic areas communicate
- Phrenicolic ligament prevents flow
- Liver/spleen injury
- Represents 2/3 of cases of blunt abdominal trauma
13FAST- principles
- Intraperitoneal fluid may be
- Blood
- Preexisting ascites
- Urine
- Intestinal contents
14FAST limitations
- US relatively insensitive for detecting traumatic
abdominal organ injury - Fluid may pool at variable rates
- Minimum volume for US detection
- Multiple views at multiple sites
- Serial exams repeat exam if there is a change in
clinical picture - Operator dependent
15Evidence supporting use of FAST
- Multiple studies in USA by EM and trauma surgeons
- Studies from Europe and Japan
- Policy statements by specialty organizations
16- Emergency department ultrasound in the
evaluation of blunt abdominal trauma. - Jehle, D., et al, Am J Emerg Med, 1993
- Single view of Morisons pouch in 44 patients
- Performed by physicians after 2 weeks training
- US compared to DPL and laparotomy
- Sensitivity 81.8
- Specificity 93.9
17Trauma surgical study
- A prospective study of surgeon-performed
ultrasound as the primary adjuvant modality of
injured patient assessment. 1994 Rozycki et al. - N358 patients
- Outcomes used US detection of hemoperitoneum/peri
cardial effusion
18Results
- 53/358 (15) patients w/ free fluid on gold
standard - All patients Sens 81.5, spec 99.7
- Blunt trauma Sens 78.6, spec 100
- PPV 98.1, NPV 96.2
- Overall accuracy was 96.5 for detection of
hemoperitoneum or pericardium
19Trauma Study
- Rozycki G, et al 1998 Surgeon-performed
ultrasound for the assessment of truncal
injuries. Lessons learned from 1540 patients - FAST exam on patients with precordial or
transthoracic wounds or blunt abdominal trauma
20- Protocol
- Pericardial fluid OR
- Stable CT
- IP fluid
- Unstable OR
- Results
- N 1540 pts, 80/1540 (5) with FF
- Overall Sens 83.3, Spec 99.7
- PPV 95, NPV 99
- Precordial/Transthor Sens 100, Spec 99.3
- Hypotensive BAT Sens 100, Spec 100
21FAST Specialty Societies
- Established clinical role in Europe, Australia,
Japan, Israel - German Surgical Society requires candidates
proficiency in ultrasound - United States
- US in ATLS
- US policies by frontline specialties
- American College of Surgeons
- ACEP,SAEM AAEM
22FAST
- Perform during
- Resuscitation
- Physical exam
- Stabilization
23Equipment
- Curved array
- Various footprints
- Small footprint for thorax
- Large for abdomen
- Variable frequencies
- 5.0 MHz thin, child
- 3.5 MHz versatile
- 2.0 MHz cardiac, large pts
24Time to Complete Scan
- Each view 30-60 seconds
- Number of views dependent on clinical question
and findings on initial views - Total exam time usually lt 3-5 minutes
- 1988 Armenian earthquake
- 400 trauma US scans in 72 hrs
25Focused Abdominal Sonography for Trauma (FAST)
- Consists of 4 views
- Subxiphoid
- Right Upper Quadrant
- Left Upper Quadrant
- Pouch of Douglas
26FAST
- Increased sensitivity with increased number of
views - Will identify pleural effusions
- Reliably detects as little as 50-100cc in the
thorax - Sensitivity gt96, specificity 99-100
27Clinical experience with FAST
- Intraperitoneal fluid
- Sensitivity 82-98, specificity 88-100
- Morisons pouch alone 36-82 sensitivity
- Increased sensitivity with
- Increasing number of views
- Trendelenberg
- Serial examinations
- Can detect as little as 250cc of free fluid
28Clinical Experience
- Solid organ disruption
- 40 sensitivity for all organs
- 33-94 for splenic injury
- Hollow viscus injury
- Sensitivity 57
- Retroperitoneal injury
- Sensitivity for identification of hemorrhage lt60
29RUQ
- Probe at right thoraco-abdominal junction
- Liver large acoustic window
- Probe marker cephalad
- Rib interference?
- Rotate 30 counterclockwise
30Scan Plane
- Same image if probe positioned
- Anterior
- Mid axillary
- Posterior
31RUQ
- Image on screen
- Liver cephalad
- Kidney inferiorly
- Morisons Pouch space between Glissons capsule
and Gerotas fascia
32Normal RUQ
- Image kidney
- Longitudinally
- Transversely
- Two toned structure
- Cortex/medulla
- Renal sinus
33Appearance of blood
- Fresh blood
- Anechoic (black)
- Coagulating blood
- First hypoechoic
- Later hyperechoic
34Normal Morisons Pouch
Free fluid in Morisons Pouch
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41- Branney, S.W. et al Quantitative sensitivity of
ultrasound in detecting free intraperitoneal
fluid J Trauma1995 39 - Peritoneal lavage fluid infused in 100 patients
- Simultaneous scan of Morisons pouch
- By physicians ( Surgery,EM, Radiology)
- Blinded to volume and rate of infusion
- Mean volume of detection 619cc
- Sensitivity at 1 liter 97
- 10 physicians detected less than 400cc
42 Volume Assessment by US
- Caveat to Branney study
- Artificial condition infused fluid
- Fluid in Morisons after pelvis overflow
- Tiling et al
- 200 -250ml detected by US
- Collection gt0.5cm suggests over 500ml
- Transvaginal/rectal
- 15ml of free intraperitoneal fluid
43Detection of Fluid by Ultrasound
- Affected by positioning
- Location of bleed
- Rate of bleeding
- Operator Experience
- Value of sensitivity of Ultrasound
- Detects clinically injuries
- Non-detection of fluid
- May indicate self- limited bleeding
44All Fluid is not Blood
- Ascites
- Ruptured Ovarian Cyst
- Lavage fluid
- Urine from ruptured bladder
45Mimics of Fluid in RUQ
- Perinephric fat
- May be hypoechoic like blood
- Usually evenly layered along kidney
- If in doubt, compare to left kidney
- Abdominal inflammation
- Widened extra-renal space
- Echogenicity of kidney becomes more like the
liver parenchyma
46Pitfalls
- RUQ
- Not attempting multiple probe placements
- Not placing the probe cephalad enough to use the
acoustic window of the liver - Scanning too soon before enough blood has
accumulated - Not repeating the scan
47LUQ
- Probe at left posterior axillary line
- Near ribs 9 and 10
- Angle probe obliquely (avoid ribs)
48LUQ Scan Plane
- More difficult
- Acoustic window (spleen) is smaller than liver
- Mild inspiration will optimize image
- Bowel interference is common
49LUQ Scan
spleen
kidney
Splenorenal fossa a potential space
50Normal Spleno-renal view
Free fluid around spleen
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56To Evaluate the Thorax
- Move probe
- cephalad
- longitudinal
- Image
Liver
Diaphragm
Pleural space
57Hemothorax
liver
diaphragm
fluid
58Small Pleural Effusion
Large Pleural Effusion
59- Ma O John, Mateer J, Trauma Ultrasound
Examination Versus Chest Radiography in the
Detection of Hemothorax - Ann Emerg Med March 1997
- 240 trauma US study patients
- 26 had hemothorax ( CT or chest tube)
- CXR and US
- 0 false positive
- 1 false negative
- 25 true positive
- 214 true negative
60Pelvic View
- Probe should be placed in the suprapubic position
- Either can be transverse or longitudinal
- Helpful to image before placement of a Foley
catheter
61Pelvis (Long View)
62Pelvis Transverse
63Normal Transverse pelvic
Fluid in pelvis
64Pelvic View Sagittal
clot
bladder
- Fluid in front of the bladder
- If bladder is empty or Foley already placed
- Trick of trade
- IV bag on abdomen
- Scan through bag
65Blood in the Pelvis
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68Free fluid in the pelvis
69FAST Algorithm
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70Ultrasound in the Detection of Injury From Blunt
or Penetrating Thoracic
Trauma
71Penetrating Thoracic Injury
- Clinical challenge
- Where is the penetration?
- What was the weapon?
- What was the trajectory?
- What organ(s) have been injured?
- Improved outcomes in patients with normal or
near-normal vital signs
72Penetrating Cardiac Trauma
- Pericardial effusion
- May develop suddenly or surreptitiously
- May exist before clinical signs develop
- Salvage rates better if detected before
hypotension develops
73Clinical Case
- QD is 37 year old male brought in by EMS for
ingesting entire bottle of unidentified red and
white pills. In the ambulance bay he pulls out a
knife and stabs himself in the left nipple.
74Clinical Case
- Initial BP 116/72, pulse 109 RR 24. IVs placed.
- No JVD, Clear breath sounds, non tender abdomen
- As CXR is about to be done, pulse increases to
134. - Bedside ultrasound is done while cartridge is
developed.
75Clinical Case
76Clinical Case
- Patient is taken to the OR
- Penetrating cardiac wound is repaired
77Subcostal View
- Most practical in trauma setting
- Away from airway and neck/chest procedures
- Also called Sub-Xyphoid view
78 Subcostal View
79Subcostal View
80Pericardial Fluid
fluid
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86Occult Penetrating Cardiac Trauma
- Observation unreliable
- Subxiphoid window
- Invasive
- 100 sensitive, 92 specific
- Negative exploration rates (as high as 80)
- Ultrasound reliable indicator of even small
pericardial effusion
87Trauma Study
- The role of ultrasound in patients with
possible penetrating cardiac wounds a
prospective multicenter study. - Rozycki GS J Trauma. 1999
- Pericardial scans performed in 261 patients
- Sensitivity 100, specificity 96.9
- PPV 81 NPV100
- Time interval BUS to OR 12.1 /- 5.9 min
88Avoid Pitfalls
- Normal echo does not definitively rule out major
pericardial injury - Repeat echo with ? clinical picture
- Epicardial fat pad may easily be misinterpreted
as clot - Hemothorax may be confused with pericardial
effusion
89Blunt Cardiac Trauma
- Basic Assessments
- Pericardial effusion
- Assess for wall motion abnormality
- RV
- closest to anterior chest wall
- Most likely to be injured
- Advanced Assessments
- Assess thoracic aorta may need TEE to see all
of thoracic aorta - Hematoma
- Intimal flap
- Abnormal contour
- Valvular dysfunction or septal rupture
90Blunt cardiac trauma
- Injuries difficult to assess by FAST
- Valvular incompetence
- Myocardial rupture
- Intracardiac thrombosis
- Ventricular aneurysm
- Coronary Thrombosis
- Intra-cardiac Thrombosis
91- The most important preoperative objective in
the management of the patient with trauma is to
ascertain whether or not laparotomy is needed,
and not the diagnosis of a specific organ injury