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    Intensive Care Med. 2003 Dec;29(12):2187-92. Epub 2003 Oct 14.

    The "lung pulse": an early ultrasound sign of complete atelectasis.

    Source

    Service de Réanimation Médicale, Hôpital Ambroise-Paré, 9 rue Charles de Gaulle, 92100, Boulogne (Paris), France.

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVE:

    Complete atelectasis can be immediately generated by selective intubation. A dynamic lung ultrasound sign can be described as the association of absent lung sliding with the perception of heart activity at the pleural line, a sign which was called "lung pulse." We examined whether this sign be used promptly to confirm complete atelectasis due to selective intubation.

    DESIGN AND SETTING:

    Prospective study in the medical intensive care unit of a university-affiliated teaching hospital.

    PATIENTS:

    Consecutive patients with no history of respiratory disorders and needing intubation were enrolled. Fifteen patients with selective intubation of the right lung were compared with 30 patients with nonselective intubation and 15 healthy volunteers.

    INTERVENTIONS:

    The "lung pulse" was sought at the left anterolateral chest wall in intubated patients. Healthy subjects were studied during breathing and apnea.

    RESULTS:

    A left "lung pulse" was immediately present in 14 of 15 patients with right selective intubation, and absent, with normal lung sliding, in all 30 correctly intubated patients and in all 15 healthy subjects during breathing. All healthy subjects exhibited a "lung pulse" in apnea. The "lung pulse" had a sensitivity of 93% and a specificity of 100% for the diagnosis of complete atelectasis following selective intubation in patients without previous respiratory disorders.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    The "lung pulse" is a sign of complete atelectasis which is observable immediately before radiological changes. Its absence which is correlated with the absence of selective intubation and of conserved lung inflation can eliminate the need for confirmation radiography.

    PMID:
    14557855
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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