Point-of-Care Kidney and Genitourinary Ultrasound in Adults: Image Acquisition.

Autor: Turk M; Division of Nephrology, Duke University School of Medicine; michael.turk@duke.edu., Catanese B; Division of Nephrology, Duke University School of Medicine., Lefler B; Division of Hospital Medicine, Durham VA Health Care System, Division of General Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine., Sparks MA; Division of Nephrology, Duke University School of Medicine., Bronshteyn YS; Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University School of Medicine., Bowman A; Division of Hospital Medicine, Durham VA Health Care System, Division of General Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE [J Vis Exp] 2024 Jun 21 (208). Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jun 21.
DOI: 10.3791/66802
Abstrakt: A range of conditions involving the kidneys and urinary bladder can cause organ-threatening complications that are preventable if diagnosed promptly with diagnostic imaging. Common imaging modalities include either computed tomography or diagnostic ultrasound. Traditionally, ultrasound of the kidney-genitourinary system has required consultative teams consisting of a sonographer performing image acquisition and a radiologist performing image interpretation. However, diagnostic point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) has recently emerged as a useful tool to troubleshoot acute kidney injury at the bedside. Studies have shown that non-radiologists can be trained to perform diagnostic POCUS of the kidneys and bladder with high accuracy for a set number of important conditions. Currently, diagnostic POCUS of the kidney-genitourinary system remains underused in actual clinical practice. This is likely because image acquisition for this organ system is unfamiliar to most clinicians in specialties that encounter acute kidney injury, including primary care, emergency medicine, intensive care, anesthesiology, nephrology, and urology. To address this multi-specialty educational gap, this narrative review was developed by a multi-disciplinary group to provide a specialty-agnostic framework for kidney-genitourinary POCUS image acquisition: indications/contraindications, patient positioning, transducer selection, acquisition sequence, and exam limitations. Finally, we describe foundational concepts in kidney-genitourinary ultrasound image interpretation, including key abnormal findings that every bedside clinician performing this modality should know.
Databáze: MEDLINE