Emergency Ultrasound Made Easy 🔍
Justin Bowra; Russell E McLaughlin; Paul Atkinson, Dr.; Jaimie L Henry Elsevier Health Sciences, Made Easy, 3, 2021
英语 [en] · PDF · 76.8MB · 2021 · 📘 非小说类图书 · 🚀/lgli/lgrs · Save
描述
This simple, jargon-free text fits in your pocket, providing an ‘on-the-spot’ guide to clinician-performed ultrasound in the emergency department, intensive care unit or in the field.
Written by an international team of experts and comprehensively updated in its third edition, Emergency Ultrasound Made Easy brings together in one volume the latest indications for focused ultrasound, including those related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The text is highly accessible and easy to use in an emergency. It is aimed at the rapidly expanding cohort of non-radiologist clinical sonographers who use focused ultrasound. However, its broad scope (for example using ultrasound in the rapid diagnosis of DVT) makes it an invaluable addition to the library of any doctor with an interest in the technique, whether in primary care or the hospital setting.
Simple to read and follow Free of jargon Fast step-by-step guide to ultrasound procedures Clear diagrams Tips and pitfalls to avoid Multiple accompanying videos featuring examples of ultrasound in clinical practice New chapter on the use of ultrasound in small anatomical structures such as the eyes and testes New chapter on paediatric ultrasound Respiratory chapter updated to include COVID-19 Multiple accompanying videos featuring examples of ultrasound in clinical practice New chapter on the use of ultrasound in small anatomical structures such as the eyes and testes New chapter on paediatric ultrasound Respiratory chapter updated to include COVID-19
备用文件名
lgrsnf/15188679.pdf
备选作者
Theris A. Touhy; Kathleen F Jett
备用出版商
Butterworth-Heinemann Ltd
备用出版商
Elsevier Limited (UK)
备用出版商
Elsevier Science Ltd
备用出版商
W B Saunders Co Ltd
备用版本
United Kingdom and Ireland, United Kingdom
备用版本
Third edition, Amsterdam, 2021
备用版本
Third edition, Amsterdam, 2022
备用版本
3, 20210327
备用描述
Cover
IFC
Half title
Title
Copyright
Contributors
Contents
Video
1 - Introduction
What is ultrasound?
What is point-of-care ultrasound?
What it is not (you are not a radiologist!)
First considerations
The clinical question to be answered
Limitations of emergency ultrasound
Operator and technical limitations
Will a scan change management in the emergency department?
Summary
2 - How ultrasound works
What is ultrasound?
Types of ultrasound
Producing the image
The transducer
Orientation
Driving the ultrasound machine
Gain
Time gain compensation
Depth
Focus/position
Freeze
Artefacts
Acoustic enhancement and acoustic windows
Acoustic shadowing
Edge shadows
Mirror image
Reverberation
Size of ultrasound systems
Safety considerations
Handy hints
Summary
3 - Abdominal aorta
The question: is there an abdominal aortic aneurysm?
Why use ultrasound?
Clinical picture
Before you scan
The technique and views
Patient’s position
Probe and scanner settings
Probe placement and landmarks
Essential views
Handy hints
What ultrasound can tell you
What ultrasound cannot tell you
Now what?
Summary
4 - Trauma and abdominal free fluid
The question: is there free fluid?
Why use ultrasound?
Clinical picture
Cautions and contraindications
Before you scan
Technique and views
Patient’s position
Probe and scanner settings
The five views
Essential views
Handy hints
What FAST can tell you
What FAST cannot tell you
Now what?
Summary
5 - Lung and thorax
How can lung ultrasound help me?
Why use ultrasound?
What lung ultrasound can help you with
What lung ultrasound cannot tell you
Cautions and contraindications
Technique and views
Patient’s position
Probe and scanner settings
The views
What to look for
Normal lung
Pneumothorax
Pleural fluid
Alveolar-interstitial syndrome
Alveolar consolidation
Pneumonitis and SARS/COVID-19
Handy hints and pitfalls
Now what?
Summary
6 - Focused cardiac ultrasound and shock protocols
How can focused cardiac and shock ultrasound help me?
Why use ultrasound?
Classic haemodynamic patterns
What focused cardiac ultrasound can tell you
Diagnosis
Intervention
What focused cardiac ultrasound cannot tell you
Focused versus comprehensive echo
Transthoracic versus transoesophageal echocardiography
Technique and views
Preparation
Patient’s position
Probe and scanner settings
Handy hints
The heart
Normal anatomy
Windows
Pericardium
Left ventricle size
Left ventricle contractility
Right ventricle size and contractility
Other obvious abnormalities
Inferior vena cava: diameter and collapse theory
Technique
Beyond focused cardiac scanning
Left ventricular function
Mitral annular plane systolic excursion
E-point septal separation
Fractional shortening
Right ventricular function
Tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion
Suggested ultrasound approach to the patient with undifferentiated shock
Handy hints and pitfalls
Now what?
Summary
7 - Renal tract
Introduction
Why use ultrasound? Five good reasons
Anatomy
The technique, probe placement and views
What ultrasound can tell you
Is the bladder full? Is the catheter in the right place?
Where can I safely place the suprapubic catheter?
Is there a stone in the vesicoureteric junction? Or elsewhere?
What size are the kidneys?
Is there hydronephrosis?
False positives for hydronephrosis
False negatives for hydronephrosis
Is there pyelonephritis?
What ultrasound cannot tell you
Handy hints and caveats
Now what?
Summary
8 - The biliary tree and the gastrointestinal tract
Introduction
Biliary ultrasound: gall bladder and biliary tree
Why use ultrasound?
Anatomy
What emergency ultrasound can tell you
What emergency ultrasound cannot tell you
The technique and views
Patient’s position and fasting status
Gall bladder: probe placement, targets and pathologies
Common bile duct: probe placement, targets and pathologies
Handy hints and caveats
Now what?
Summary
The gastrointestinal tract
Introduction
Why use ultrasound?
Anatomy
Dimensions and anatomy
What gastrointestinal tract-ultrasound can tell you
What gastrointestinal tract-ultrasound cannot tell you
The technique and views
Patient’s position and probe and scanner settings
Probe placement and landmarks
Specific use cases/clinical scenarios
Suspected appendicitis
Suspected bowel obstruction
Suspected ileitis/colitis
Handy hints and caveats
Now what? (clinical integration)
Summary
9 - Early pregnancy
Introduction
Ectopic pregnancy
Why use ultrasound?
What emergency ultrasound can tell you
What emergency ultrasound cannot tell you
The role of beta-human chorionic gonadotropin
Clinical picture
Before you scan
Technique and views
Transabdominal scan
Findings
Now what?
Handy hints
Summary
10 - Ultrasound-guided procedures
Why use ultrasound?
Aseptic technique
Ultrasound needle guidance technique
Static technique
Real-time (dynamic) technique
Central venous cannulation
Anatomy
Central venous cannulation using real-time ultrasound
Preparation
Patient’s position
Probe and scanner settings
Needle guidance
Out-of-plane technique
Technique
Handy hints and pitfalls
In-plane technique
Technique
Handy hints and pitfalls
Thoracocentesis, pericardiocentesis and paracentesis Ultrasound assessment of effusions
What ultrasound can tell you
Preparation
Patient’s position
Probe and scanner settings
Thoracocentesis
Pericardiocentesis
Paracentesis
Handy hints and pitfalls
Suprapubic catheterisation
Lumbar puncture
Technique
Handy hints and pitfalls
Endotracheal tube placement
Why use ultrasound?
Anatomy
Preparation
Technique
Handy hints and pitfalls
Nasogastric tube placement
Why use ultrasound?
Preparation
Technique
Handy hints and pitfalls
11 - Nerve blocks
Why use ultrasound?
Which blocks?
Contraindications to regional anaesthesia
Complications of regional anaesthesia
Ultrasound appearance
Probe and scanner settings
Technique
Screening examination
Preparation
Sterile technique
Transverse section view of nerve
In-plane needle insertion
Interfascial plane blocks
General note
Fascia iliaca block
Serratus plane block
Peripheral nerve blocks
Axillary block
Forearm and wrist blocks
Femoral nerve block
Interscalene block
Patient position
Handy hints and pitfalls
Summary
12 - Deep vein thrombosis
The question: is there a deep vein thrombosis?
Why use compression ultrasound?
Anatomy
Clinical picture
Before you scan
The technique and views
Patient’s position
Groin to adductor canal
Popliteal segment
Probe and scanner settings
Probe placement and landmarks
Essential views
Handy hints
What three-point compression ultrasound can tell you
What three-point compression ultrasound cannot tell you
Now what?
Summary
13 - Musculoskeletal and soft tissues
Glenohumeral joint dislocation
Why use ultrasound?
Technique
Sonographic appearances
Handy hints
Summary
Soft tissue infection
Why use ultrasound?
Technique
Sonographic appearance
Handy hints
Summary
Fracture diagnosis
Why use ultrasound?
Technique
Sonographic appearances
Handy hints
Summary
Knee arthrocentesis
Why use ultrasound?
Technique
Sonographic appearances
Handy hints
Summary
Ultrasound of foreign objects
How to improve the image quality using a water bath
Technique
Retained foreign object removal
Handy hints
Summary
14 - Use of ultrasound for small anatomic structures
The eye and orbit
How can ocular ultrasound help me?
Why use ocular ultrasound?
The technique and views
Patient’s position
Probe scanner settings
Probe placement and landmarks
Scanning steps
What ultrasound can tell you
Retinal detachment
Posterior vitreous detachment
Vitreous haemorrhage
Lens dislocation
Optic nerve sheath diameter
What ocular ultrasound cannot tell you
Handy hints and caveats
The testicles and scrotum
How can using testicular and scrotal ultrasound help me?
Why use testicular and scrotal ultrasound?
Patient’s position
Probe scanner settings
Probe placement
Scanning steps
What emergency ultrasound can tell you
Testicular torsion
Epididymoorchitis
Hydrocoele
Varicocele
Microcalcifications
What emergency ultrasound cannot tell you
15 - Paediatric ultrasound
Introduction: how is paediatric ultrasound different?
How to use this chapter
Paediatric lungs (see also Chapter 5)
Why use ultrasound?
Anatomy
What emergency ultrasound can tell you
Technique and views
Abnormal findings
Handy hints and caveats
Now what?
Paediatric abdomen (see also Chapter 8)
Hypertrophic pyloric stenosis Clinical picture
Anatomy
Technique and views
Abnormal findings in hypertrophic pyloric stenosis
Handy hints and caveats
Summary
Intussusception Introduction and/or clinical picture
Why use ultrasound?
Anatomy
What emergency ultrasound can tell you
What emergency ultrasound cannot tell you
Before you scan
Technique and views
Abnormal findings
Handy hints and caveats Now what?
Paediatric musculoskeletal
Paediatric fractures Introduction and/or clinical picture
Anatomy
Why use ultrasound?
What emergency ultrasound can tell you
What emergency ultrasound cannot tell you
Before you scan
Technique and views
Handy hints and caveats
Now what?
Paediatric hip effusion
Before you scan
The technique and views
Probe and scanner settings
Probe placement and landmarks
Ultrasound-guided intravenous cannulation in infants and toddlers (see also Chapter 10)
Introduction
Anatomy
Technique and views
16 - Emergency ultrasound in prehospital medicine
Why use ultrasound in this setting?
EXAMPLES of resuscitative ultrasound in prehospital medicine
Handy hints and pitfalls
Before you scan
Airway and breathing
Airway assessment with ultrasound
Rationale
Pitfalls
Breathing assessment with ultrasound
Rationale
Pitfalls
Circulation
Rationale
Pitfalls
Vascular access
Rationale
Pitfalls
Musculoskeletal
Rationale
Technique
Pitfalls
Appendix: Resources and further reading
Index
开源日期
2025-01-29
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