In diesem Webinar lassen uns Dr. John Martin (Chief Medical Officer), Rick Mendez (Head of Clinical Development), Dr. Mike Stone (Head of Education) sowie unser Ehrengast Dr. Yale Tung Chen an ihrem Erfahrungsreichtum teilhaben. Dr. Chen wurde am 9. März positiv auf SARS-CoV-2 getestet und hat seinen Krankheitsverlauf mithilfe von Butterfly iQ verfolgt. Er berichtet von seinen persönlichen Erfahrungen und beschreibt, welchen hohen Stellenwert POCUS während der Corona-Pandemie in seinen Augen einnimmt.
Clinical evidence consistently suggests that lung ultrasound has a higher sensitivity than CXR in lung conditions such as pneumonia. Review this case study discussion for more details.
A full list of chemically compatible cleaners/disinfectants and other recommended best practices are available on the cleaning section of our COVID-19 resource center.
How accurate are these ultrasound images as compared to the traditional/conventional ultrasound machines in a healthcare setting?
A key part of the regulatory process associated with the development of a new medical device is to prove substantial equivalance to a predicate, and Butterfly iQ is no exception. In this process, it is mandatory to demonstrate equivalent-or-better performance than products currently on the market.
Initial findings suggest that the ultrasound appearances of COVID-19 pneumonia demonstrate patchy/confluent B-lines, subpleural consolidations and/or a thickened, irregular pleural line. While many of these findings can be seen in viral (and more rarely bacterial) pneumonia, the diffuse and bilateral postero-inferior locations are more typical of COVID-19 as opposed to bacterial pneumonia.
If possible, stable patients with abnormal lung imaging findings that don’t require hospitalization can be monitored at home, ideally with pulse oximetry and health care practitioner contact through phone or telemedicine.
The ASE Statement on COVID-19 imaging can be found here: https://www.asecho.org/ase-statement-covid-19/ It states that cardiac ultrasound can be applied at the bedside to "screen for important cardiovascular findings, elucidate cardiac contributions to symptoms or signs, triage patients in need of full feature echocardiographic services and even, perhaps, identify early ventricular dysfunction during COVID-19 infection". Anecdotally, we have heard that huge numbers of cardiac echoes are being requested from the ER (80 requests/day is the experience of one well-known institution in NY) and bedside ultrasound is one method to triage these requests.
We only advocate that ultrasound be used in a responsible fashion as part of a clinical exam. It is a tool that needs to be used when required. For patients who are clearly non-diseased or clearly very diseased, triage POCUS may not be indicated. POCUS can be more useful to screen the "middle third" of patients (typically referred to as “the grey zone”) who clinically are ambiguous.
Clinical evidence consistently suggests that lung ultrasound has a higher sensitivity than CXR in lung conditions such as pneumonia. Review this case study for more information.
Daily ultrasound can be used to track disease progress or resolution, as was demonstrated in real-time by Dr. Yale Tung Chen Emergency Medicine Hospital Universitario La Paz & COVID-19 Patient on twitter @yaletung.