Results of a Prospective Study to Evaluate the Impact of Point-of-Care Ultrasound in the Enhancement of Gastrointestinal Bleeding Risk Scores

被引:1
|
作者
Tung Chen, Yale [1 ,3 ]
Blancas Gomez-Casero, Rafael [3 ,4 ]
Quintana Diaz, Manuel [2 ]
Villen Villegas, Tomas [1 ,5 ]
Cobo Mora, Julio [1 ]
Carballo Cardona, Cesar [1 ]
机构
[1] Hosp Univ La Paz, Dept Emergency Med, Paseo Castellana 261, Madrid 28046, Spain
[2] Hosp Univ La Paz, Crit Care, Madrid, Spain
[3] Univ Alfonso X El Sabio, Dept Med, Madrid, Spain
[4] Hosp Univ Tajo, Dept Crit Care, Aranjuez, Spain
[5] Univ Francisco Vitoria, Dept Med, Madrid, Spain
关键词
gastrointestinal bleeding; inferior vena cava; passive leg-raising test; point-of-care ultrasound; systolic obliteration of the left ventricle; velocity time integral; FLUID RESPONSIVENESS; EARLY DISCHARGE; FLOW;
D O I
10.1002/jum.15101
中图分类号
O42 [声学];
学科分类号
070206 ; 082403 ;
摘要
Objectives Gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding is a common illness seen in the emergency department. The prognosis varies from self-limited to potentially life threatening. Currently available GI bleeding risk scores have only a modest predictive value, limiting their wide implementation. The aim of this study was to assess the association and capability of point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) used by emergency physicians to improve common GI bleeding scores for predicting complications and long-term outcomes of patients with GI bleeding, which to our knowledge have never been studied. Methods Between August 2015 and April 2017, 203 hemodynamically stable patients with acute GI bleeding admitted to the emergency department were prospectively investigated. Using ultrasound, we measured the inferior vena cava diameter, cardiac output with surrogate markers such as the velocity time integral before and after the passive leg-raising test, and the presence of systolic obliteration of the left ventricle. The Rockall and Glasgow-Blatchford scores were calculated for patients with upper GI bleeding and the Velayos score for lower GI bleeding. The patients had follow-up during hospitalization and 30 days later to assess for early and late adverse events (AEs). Then we integrated the ultrasound findings of hypovolemia into the GI bleeding scores, assessing the capability to detect AEs. Results In our cohort, patients with upper GI bleeding who showed left ventricle kissing walls had a worse evolution, with a greater presence of late AEs (odds ratio [OR], 3.8; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.32-10.96; P = .01). Patients with lower GI bleeding who showed a collapse of the inferior vena cava (>50%) after passive leg raising had a greater presence of early AEs (OR, 3.6; 95% CI, 1.46-9.00; P = .004). The predictive performance of the Rockall score (receiver operating characteristic analysis: area under the curve [AUC], 77.6%; 95% CI, 66.3%-88.8%) increased with POCUS (AUC, 80.3%; 95% CI, 69.5%-91.1%); that of the Glasgow-Blatchford score (AUC, 72.5%; 95% CI, 59.9%-85.2%) increased with POCUS (AUC, 73.2%; 95% CI, 61.1%-85.4%); and that of Velayos score (AUC, 55.7%; 95% CI, 42.5%-69.0%) also increased with POCUS (AUC, 72.2%; 95% CI, 61.1%-83.3%). Conclusions The use of POCUS in GI bleeding is feasible and enhances common GI bleeding risk scores, showing better predictive performance in detecting AEs.
引用
收藏
页码:279 / 287
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Point-of-care gastrointestinal ultrasound in inflammatory bowel disease: An accurate alternative for disease monitoring
    Sathananthan, Dharshan
    Rajagopalan, Arvind
    Van De Ven, Lucinda
    Martin, Serena
    Fon, James
    Costello, Samuel
    Bryant, Robert V.
    JGH OPEN, 2020, 4 (02): : 273 - 279
  • [32] Impact of Critical Care Point-of-Care Ultrasound Short-Courses on Trainee Competence
    Rajamani, Arvind
    Miu, Michelle
    Huang, Stephen
    Elbourne-Binns, Henry
    Pracher, Florian
    Gunawan, Sutrisno
    Lakshmanan, Ramanathan
    Flynn, Gordon
    Sasidaran, Kandasamy
    Subasinghe, Shyama
    Parmar, Jinal
    Trieu Hyunh
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2019, 47 (09) : E782 - E784
  • [33] PuraStat in gastrointestinal bleeding: results of a prospective multicentre observational pilot study
    Federica Branchi
    Rolf Klingenberg-Noftz
    Kristina Friedrich
    Nataly Bürgel
    Severin Daum
    Juliane Buchkremer
    Elena Sonnenberg
    Michael Schumann
    Christoph Treese
    Hanno Tröger
    Donata Lissner
    Hans-Jörg Epple
    Britta Siegmund
    Andrea Stroux
    Andreas Adler
    Winfried Veltzke-Schlieker
    Daniel Autenrieth
    Silke Leonhardt
    Andreas Fischer
    Christian Jürgensen
    Ulrich-Frank Pape
    Bertram Wiedenmann
    Oliver Möschler
    Maximilian Schreiner
    Mathias Z. Strowski
    Volkmar Hempel
    Yvonne Huber
    Helmut Neumann
    Christian Bojarski
    Surgical Endoscopy, 2022, 36 : 2954 - 2961
  • [34] PuraStat in gastrointestinal bleeding: results of a prospective multicentre observational pilot study
    Branchi, Federica
    Klingenberg-Noftz, Rolf
    Friedrich, Kristina
    Burgel, Nataly
    Daum, Severin
    Buchkremer, Juliane
    Sonnenberg, Elena
    Schumann, Michael
    Treese, Christoph
    Troger, Hanno
    Lissner, Donata
    Epple, Hans-Jorg
    Siegmund, Britta
    Stroux, Andrea
    Adler, Andreas
    Veltzke-Schlieker, Winfried
    Autenrieth, Daniel
    Leonhardt, Silke
    Fischer, Andreas
    Jurgensen, Christian
    Pape, Ulrich-Frank
    Wiedenmann, Bertram
    Moschler, Oliver
    Schreiner, Maximilian
    Strowski, Mathias Z.
    Hempel, Volkmar
    Huber, Yvonne
    Neumann, Helmut
    Bojarski, Christian
    SURGICAL ENDOSCOPY AND OTHER INTERVENTIONAL TECHNIQUES, 2022, 36 (05): : 2954 - 2961
  • [35] Simpli?ed point-of-care ultrasound protocol to con?rm central venous catheter placement:A prospective study
    Sean P.Wilson
    Samer Assaf
    Shadi Lahham
    Mohammad Subeh
    Alan Chiem
    Craig Anderson
    Samantha Shwe
    Ryan Nguyen
    John C.Fox
    World Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2017, (01) : 25 - 28
  • [36] LUNG ASSESSMENT WITH POINT-OF-CARE ULTRASOUND IN RESPIRATORY CORONAVIRUS DISEASE (COVID-19): A PROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY
    Speidel, Victor
    Conen, Anna
    Gisler, Valentin
    Fux, Christoph A.
    Haubitz, Sebastian
    ULTRASOUND IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2021, 47 (04) : 896 - 901
  • [37] Impact of worklist selection on point-of-care ultrasound workflow - a quality improvement project
    Rowland, Jonathan
    Baker, Jessa
    Dunn, Natassia
    Whited, Matthew
    Saadat, Soheil
    Fox, J. Christian
    BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2025, 25 (01)
  • [38] A PILOT PROSPECTIVE STUDY TO VALIDATE POINT-OF-CARE ULTRASOUND IN COMPARISON TO X-RAY EXAMINATION IN DETECTING FRACTURES
    Caroselli, Costantino
    Zaccaria, Eleonora
    Blaivas, Michael
    Dib, Giovanni
    Fiorentino, Romano
    Longo, Daniele
    ULTRASOUND IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2020, 46 (01) : 11 - 19
  • [39] CLINICAL IMPACT OF POINT-OF-CARE ULTRASOUND IN INTERNAL MEDICINE INPATIENTS: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
    Cid-Serra, Ximena
    Hoang, William
    EL Ansary, Doa
    Canty, David
    Royse, Alistai
    Royse, Colin
    ULTRASOUND IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2022, 48 (02) : 170 - 179
  • [40] Impact of Deliberate Practice on Point-of-Care Ultrasound Interpretation of Right Ventricle Pathology
    Love, Angela
    Bondarsky, Eric
    Filopei, Jason
    Wang, Dongliang
    Patrawalla, Paru
    ATS SCHOLAR, 2022, 3 (02): : 229 - 241