Preview

Медицинский алфавит

Расширенный поиск

Роль прикроватного ультразвукового исследования легких при различных респираторных заболеваниях

https://doi.org/10.33667/2078-5631-2021-42-42-47

Аннотация

Прикроватное ультразвуковое исследование легких, как самостоятельный метод, так и в сочетании с другими ультразвуковыми методами, является полезным диагностическим инструментом у пациентов с различными респираторными заболеваниями. В настоящее время УЗИ легких используется в алгоритме диагностики неотложных состояний, таких как острый респираторный дистресс-синдром, пневмоторакс, остановка сердца, острая дыхательная недостаточность, пневмонии. Более того, полуколичественное определение легочного застоя может выполняться для определения тяжести интерстициального синдрома и тяжести поражения легких при коронавирусной пневмонии. В обзоре рассматриваются базовая семиотика УЗИ, а также роль прикроватного УЗИ легких при различных респираторных заболеваниях.

Об авторе

А. Ф. Сафарова (Айтен Фуад-кызы)
Медицинский институт ФГАОУ ВО «Российский университет дружбы народов»; ГБУЗ «Городская клиническая больница имени В. В. Виноградова Департамента здравоохранения Москвы»
Россия

Сафарова Айтен Фуад-кызы, д. м. н., проф. кафедры внутренних болезней с курсом кардиологии и функциональной диагностики имени академика В. С. Моисеева; отделение ультразвуковых и функциональных методов диагностики

Москва



Список литературы

1. Point-of-care ultrasound in intensive care units: assessment of 1073 procedures in a multicentric, prospective, observational study. L. Zieleskiewicz [et al.]. Intensive Care Medicine. 2015. V. 41. No. 9. P. 1638–1647.

2. International evidence-based recommendations on ultrasound-guided vascular access. M. Lamperti [et al.]. Intensive Care Medicine. 2012. V. 38. No. 7. P. 1105–1117.

3. Point-of-care multiorgan ultrasonography for the evaluation of undifferentiated hypotension in the emergency department. G. Volpicelli [et al.]. Intensive Care Medicine. 2013. V. 39. No. 7. P. 1290–1298.

4. Lung ultrasound in acute respiratory distress syndrome and acute lung injury. C. Arbelot [et al.]. Current Opinion in Critical Care. 2008. V. 14. No. 1. P. 70–74.

5. Lichtenstein D. A. Relevance of lung ultrasound in the diagnosis of acute respiratory failure*: the BLUE protocol. D. A. Lichtenstein, G. A. Meziere. Chest. 2008. V. 134. No. 1. P. 117–125.

6. Ross A. M. Ultrasonic examination of the lung. A. M. Ross, E. Genton, J. H. Holmes. The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine. 1968. V. 72. No. 4. P. 556–64.

7. Ultrasound assessment of antibiotic-induced pulmonary reaeration in ventilator-associated pneumonia*. B. Bouhemad [et al.]. Critical Care Medicine. 2010. V. 38. No. 1. P. 84–92.

8. Clinical review: Bedside lung ultrasound in critical care practice. B. Bouhemad [et al.]. Critical Care. 2007. V. 11. No. 1. P. 205.

9. Early lung ultrasonography predicts the occurrence of acute respiratory distress syndrome in blunt trauma patients. D. Leblanc [et al.]. Intensive Care Medicine. 2014. V. 40. No. 10. P. 1468–1474.

10. Pleural Ultrasound Compared with Chest Radiographic Detection of Pneumothorax Resolution After Drainage. A. Galbois [et al.]. Chest. 2010. V. 138. No. 3. P. 648–655.

11. International evidence-based recommendations for point-of-care lung ultrasound. G. Volpicelli [et al.]. Intensive Care Medicine. 2012. V. 38. No. 4. P. 577–591.

12. Lichtenstein D.A. A Bedside Ultrasound Sign Ruling Out Pneumothorax in the Critically III. D. A. Lichtenstein, Y. Menu. Chest. 1995. V. 108. No. 5. P. 1345–1348.

13. Lichtenstein D. A lung ultrasound sign allowing bedside distinction between pulmonary edema and COPD: the comet-tail artifact. D. Lichtenstein, G. Mezière. Intensive Care Medicine. 1998. V. 24. No. 12. P. 1331–1334.

14. The Comet-tail Artifact. D. Lichtenstein [et al.]. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. 1997. V. 156. No. 5. P. 1640–1646.

15. The comet-tail artifact: an ultrasound sign ruling out pneumothorax. D. Lichtenstein [et al.]. Intensive Care Medicine. 1999. V. 25. No. 4. P. 383–388.

16. Impact of lung ultrasound on clinical decision making in critically ill patients. N. Xirouchaki [et al.]. Intensive Care Medicine. 2014. V. 40. No. 1. P. 57–65.

17. Could the use of bedside lung ultrasound reduce the number of chest x-rays in the intensive care unit? E. Brogi [et al.]. Cardiovascular Ultrasound. 2017. V. 15. No. 1. P. 23.

18. A-Lines and B-Lines. D. A. Lichtenstein [et al.]. Chest. 2009. V. 136. No. 4. P. 1014–1020.

19. Assessment of Lung Aeration and Recruitment by CT-Scan and Ultrasound in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Patients*. D. Chiumello [et al.]. Critical Care Medicine. 2018. V. 46. No. 11. P. 1761–1768.

20. The ‘lung point’: an ultrasound sign specific to pneumothorax. D. Lichtenstein [et al.]. Intensive Care Medicine. 2000. V. 26. No. 10. P. 1434–1440.

21. Why, when, and how to use lung ultrasound during the COVID‑19 pandemic: enthusiasm and caution. L. Gargani [et al.]. European Heart Journal – Cardiovascular Imaging. 2020. V. 21. No. 9. P. 941–948.

22. Integrated Use of Bedside Lung Ultrasound and Echocardiography in Acute Respiratory Failure. B. Bataille [et al.]. Chest. 2014. V. 146. No. 6. P. 1586–1593.

23. Picano E. Ultrasound of extravascular lung water: a new standard for pulmonary congestion. E. Picano, P. A. Pellikka. European Heart Journal. 2016. V. 37. No. 27. P. 2097–2104.

24. Dynamic changes and prognostic value of pulmonary congestion by lung ultrasound in acute and chronic heart failure: a systematic review. E. Platz [et al.]. European Journal of Heart Failure. 2017. V. 19. No. 9. P. 1154–1163.

25. Lung Ultrasound in Acute Heart Failure. E. Platz [et al.]. JACC: Heart Failure. 2019. V. 7. No. 10. P. 849–858.

26. Hand-Held Thoracic Sonography for Detecting Post-Traumatic Pneumothoraces: The Extended Focused Assessment With Sonography For Trauma (EFAST). A. W. Kirkpatrick [et al.]. The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care. 2004. V. 57. No. 2. P. 288–295.

27. Lung ultrasound in optimizing management of patients with heart failure: current status and future prospects. Z. D. Kobalava [et al.]. Russian Journal of Cardiology. 2020. V. 25. No. 1. P. 97–104.

28. Usefulness of ultrasound lung comets as a nonradiologic sign of extravascular lung water. Z. Jambrik [et al.]. The American Journal of Cardiology. 2004. V. 93. No. 10. P. 1265–1270.

29. Lichtenstein D.A. BLUE-Protocol and FALLS-Protocol. D. A. Lichtenstein. Chest. 2015. V. 147. No. 6. P. 1659–1670.

30. Wooten W. M. Bedside Ultrasound Versus Chest Radiography for Detection of Pulmonary Edema: A Prospective Cohort Study. W. M. Wooten, L.E.T. Shaffer, L. A. Hamilton. Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine. 2019. V. 38. No. 4. P. 96–973.

31. Diagnosing Acute Heart Failure in the Emergency Department: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. J. L. Martindale [et al.]. Academic Emergency Medicine. 2016. V. 23. No. 3. P. 223–242.

32. Point-of-care ultrasonography in patients admitted with respiratory symptoms: a single-blind, randomised controlled trial. C. B. Laursen [et al.]. The Lancet Respiratory Medicine. 2014. V. 2. No. 8. P. 638–646.

33. Point-of-Care Ultrasonography for Evaluation of Acute Dyspnea in the ED. M. Zanobetti [et al.]. Chest. 2017. V. 151. No. 6. P. 1295–1301.

34. The RUSH Exam: Rapid Ultrasound in SHock in the Evaluation of the Critically lll. P. Perera [et al.]. Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America. 2010. V. 28. No. 1. P. 29–56.

35. Copetti R. Clinical Integrated Ultrasound of the Thorax Including Causes of Shock in Nontraumatic Critically Ill Patients. A Practical Approach. R. Copetti, P. Copetti, A. Reissig. Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology. 2012. V. 38. No. 3. P. 349–359.

36. Early fluid loading in acute respiratory distress syndrome with septic shock deteriorates lung aeration without impairing arterial oxygenation: a lung ultrasound observational study. F. P. Caltabeloti [et al.]. Critical Care. 2014. V. 18. No. 3. P. R 91.

37. Towards a less invasive approach to the early goal-directed treatment of septic shock in the ED. D. Coen [et al.]. The American Journal of Emergency Medicine. 2014. V. 32. No. 6. P. 563–568.

38. The proposal of an integrated ultrasonographic approach into the ALS algorithm for cardiac arrest: the PEA protocol. A. Testa [et al.]. Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci. 2010. V. 14. No. 2. P. 77–88.

39. Volpicelli G. Usefulness of emergency ultrasound in nontraumatic cardiac arrest. G. Volpicelli. The American journal of emergency medicine. 2011. V. 29. No. 2. P. 216–223.

40. Lichtenstein D. A. How can the use of lung ultrasound in cardiac arrest make ultrasound a holistic discipline? The example of the SESAME-protocol. D. A. Lichtenstein. Medical ultrasonography. 2014. V. 16. No. 3. P. 252–255.

41. Ultrasound imaging of pneumonia. O. Gehmacher [et al.]. Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology. 1995. V. 21. No. 9. P. 1119–1122.

42. Volpicelli G. Sonographic signs and patterns of COVID‑19 pneumonia. G. Volpicelli, L. Gargani. The Ultrasound Journal. 2020. V. 12. No. 1. P. 22.

43. Volpicelli G. What’s new in lung ultrasound during the COVID‑19 pandemic. G. Volpicelli, A. Lamorte, T. Villén. Intensive Care Medicine. 2020. V. 46. No. 7. P. 1445–1448.

44. Sultan L.R. A Review of Early Experience in Lung Ultrasound in the Diagnosis and Management of COVID‑19. L. R. Sultan, C. M. Sehgal. Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology. 2020. V. 46. No. 9. P. 2530–2545.

45. Ultrasound for ‘Lung Monitoring’ of Ventilated Patients. B. Bouhemad [et al.]. Anesthesiology. 2015. V. 122. No. 2. P. 437–447.

46. Correlation of Chest CT and RT-PCR Testing for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID‑19) in China: A Report of 1014 Cases. T. Ai [et al.]. Radiology. 2020. V. 296. No. 2. P. E 32–E 40.

47. A single-center comparative study of lung ultrasound < em> versus</em> chest computed tomography during the COVID‑19 era. Z. D. Kobalava [et al.]. Multidisciplinary Respiratory Medicine. 2021. V. 16.


Рецензия

Для цитирования:


Сафарова (Айтен Фуад-кызы) А.Ф. Роль прикроватного ультразвукового исследования легких при различных респираторных заболеваниях. Медицинский алфавит. 2021;(42):42-47. https://doi.org/10.33667/2078-5631-2021-42-42-47

For citation:


Safarova A.F. Role of point-of-care lung ultrasound in different respiratory disorders. Medical alphabet. 2021;(42):42-47. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.33667/2078-5631-2021-42-42-47

Просмотров: 388


Creative Commons License
Контент доступен под лицензией Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2078-5631 (Print)
ISSN 2949-2807 (Online)