Subjective right ventricle assessment by echo qualified intensive care specialists: assessing agreement with objective measures.


Journal

Critical care (London, England)
ISSN: 1466-609X
Titre abrégé: Crit Care
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9801902

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
07 Mar 2019
Historique:
received: 17 12 2018
accepted: 21 02 2019
entrez: 9 3 2019
pubmed: 9 3 2019
medline: 1 10 2019
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Right ventricle (RV) size and function assessment by echocardiography (echo) is a standard tool in the ICU. Frequently subjective assessment is performed, and guidelines suggest its utility in adequately trained clinicians. We aimed to compare subjective (visual) assessment of RV size and function by ICU physicians, with advanced qualifications in echocardiography, vs objective measurements. ICU specialists with a qualification in advanced echocardiography reviewed 2D echo clips from critically ill patients on mechanical ventilation with PaO Fifty-two clinicians reviewed 2D images from 80 patients. Fair agreement was seen with objective measures vs binary assessment of RV size (RV EDA 0.26 [p < 0.001], RV dimensions 0.29 [p = 0.06]) and function (RV free wall strain 0.27 [p < 0.001], TAPSE 0.27 [p < 0.001], S' 0.29 [p < 0.001], FAC 0.31 [p = 0.16]). However, ordinal data analysis showed poor agreement with RV dimensions (0.11 [p = 0.06]) and RV free wall strain (0.14 [p = 0.16]). If one-step disagreement was allowed, agreement was good (RV dimensions 0.6 [p = 0.06], RV free wall strain 0.6 [p = 0.16]). Significant overestimation of severity of abnormalities was seen with subjective assessment vs RV EDA, TAPSE, S' and fractional area change. Subjective (visual) assessment of RV size and function, by ICU specialists trained in advanced echo, can be fairly reliable for the initial exclusion of significant RV pathology. It seems prudent to avoid subjective RV assessment in isolation.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Right ventricle (RV) size and function assessment by echocardiography (echo) is a standard tool in the ICU. Frequently subjective assessment is performed, and guidelines suggest its utility in adequately trained clinicians. We aimed to compare subjective (visual) assessment of RV size and function by ICU physicians, with advanced qualifications in echocardiography, vs objective measurements.
METHODS METHODS
ICU specialists with a qualification in advanced echocardiography reviewed 2D echo clips from critically ill patients on mechanical ventilation with PaO
RESULTS RESULTS
Fifty-two clinicians reviewed 2D images from 80 patients. Fair agreement was seen with objective measures vs binary assessment of RV size (RV EDA 0.26 [p < 0.001], RV dimensions 0.29 [p = 0.06]) and function (RV free wall strain 0.27 [p < 0.001], TAPSE 0.27 [p < 0.001], S' 0.29 [p < 0.001], FAC 0.31 [p = 0.16]). However, ordinal data analysis showed poor agreement with RV dimensions (0.11 [p = 0.06]) and RV free wall strain (0.14 [p = 0.16]). If one-step disagreement was allowed, agreement was good (RV dimensions 0.6 [p = 0.06], RV free wall strain 0.6 [p = 0.16]). Significant overestimation of severity of abnormalities was seen with subjective assessment vs RV EDA, TAPSE, S' and fractional area change.
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
Subjective (visual) assessment of RV size and function, by ICU specialists trained in advanced echo, can be fairly reliable for the initial exclusion of significant RV pathology. It seems prudent to avoid subjective RV assessment in isolation.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30845976
doi: 10.1186/s13054-019-2375-z
pii: 10.1186/s13054-019-2375-z
pmc: PMC6407213
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

70

Investigateurs

Andras Nyikovics (A)
Deirdre Murphy (D)
Geoff Gordon (G)
Lewis Campbell (L)
Li Tan (L)
Mate Rudas (M)
Michael Farqharson (M)
Nicola Stanley (N)
Pierre Janin (P)
Russell Laver (R)
Soumya Ray (S)
Vinodh Nanjayya (V)
Ramsy D'Souza (R)
Paul Healey (P)
Bradley Wibrow (B)
Florian Pracher (F)
Kyle Brooks (K)
David Clancy (D)
Thomas Hamp (T)
Sebastian Knudsen (S)
Joe McCaffrey (J)
Godfrey Lo (G)
Sutrisno Gunawan (S)
Arvind Rajamani (A)
Marek Nalos (M)
Ian Seppelt (I)
Alison Main (A)
Yang Yang (Y)
Andrew Hilton (A)
Pranesh Jogia (P)
Jude Bhathan (J)
John Evans (J)
Priya Nair (P)
Lyndal Russel (L)
Mani Gopal (M)
Matthew Anstey (M)
Josh Ihle (J)
Alvin Teo (A)
Ben Cheung (B)
Matt Brian (M)
Richard Strickland (R)
Cartan Costello (C)
Peter McCanny (P)
Siew Wai (S)
Irma Bilgram (I)

Références

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Auteurs

Sam Orde (S)

Nepean Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia. sam.orde@health.nsw.gov.au.

Michel Slama (M)

Medical ICU, Amiens University Hospital, Amiens, France.

Konstantin Yastrebov (K)

St George Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia.

Anthony Mclean (A)

Nepean Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia.

Stephen Huang (S)

Nepean Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia.

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Classifications MeSH