Abstract

Background: Comprehensive transthoracic echocardiography (CTE) provides information vital to the care of acutely ill and unstable patients, but may not be readily available. Cardiac point of care ultrasound (POCUS) is well suited to providing key information at the bedside to expedite decision making. Our objective was to evaluate the feasibility of expedited-POCUS (e-POCUS) provided by the echo lab for internal medicine, cardiology and intensive care services. Methods: A new e-POCUS service was developed by the Kingston Health Sciences Center Echo Lab, whereby focused information relevant to 4 clinical situations (acute heart failure, tamponade, shock and suspected acute valvulopathy) would be provided urgently at the bedside. Requests were acquired over a 4 month period. Sonographers were immediately deployed on request and followed a standard POCUS protocol for each scenario. Staff echocardiographers provided immediate interpretation and arranged for further imaging at their discretion. The response time, diagnostic accuracy and clinical utility of e-POCUS was assessed. Results: A total of 18 patients were evaluated. The average time of an e-POCUS exam was 10 minutes and the average e-POCUS to formal CTE timing was 1.3 days. The agreement between e-POCUS and CTE for the presence of segmental wall motion abnormalities was 83% (Kappa=0.61, p=0.009) and 72% for the detection of right ventricular dilatation (Kappa =0.44, p=0.058). The e-POCUS results altered the working diagnosis in 72% of cases. Conclusion: The provision of an e-POCUS service by the Echo Lab is a feasible workflow solution meeting the demands of a new practice pattern.

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