Point of Care Ultrasound for Diagnosis and Management in Heart Failure: A Targeted Literature Review.
Cardiac POCUS
Heart failure
IVC
POCUS
Journal
POCUS journal
ISSN: 2369-8543
Titre abrégé: POCUS J
Pays: Canada
ID NLM: 9918434088906676
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
2024
2024
Historique:
medline:
29
4
2024
pubmed:
29
4
2024
entrez:
29
4
2024
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
Cardiac point of care ultrasound (POCUS) has shown increasing utility as a tool for diagnosing and managing heart failure (HF). Within cardiology, intravascular volume assessment leveraging visualization of the inferior vena cava (IVC) is a central aspect of care, as IVC size correlates with central venous pressure. This targeted literature review aimed to examine the existing literature assessing the use of POCUS in diagnosis and management of HF patients utilizing POCUS-based IVC measurement either alone or in combination with secondary methods. A targeted PubMed and Ovid database search up until August 28, 2023 using a keyword search was completed. Studies that did not include IVC assessment with POCUS in HF were excluded. The initial search using both PubMed and Ovid resulted in 370 journal publications. After exclusion criteria were used 15 studies were included in the review. Studies were grouped into three categories: 1) how well POCUS was able to identify HF, 2) whether POCUS-based findings correlated with other measures evaluating HF and was able to predict the effect of diuretic administration, and 3) whether POCUS-based findings served as a good prognostic indicator. The 5 studies that evaluated HF identification with POCUS found that both diagnostic sensitivity and specificity may reach 90%-100% when IVC measurement was coupled with a lung ultrasound assessing the presence of B-lines or pleural effusion. Five studies assessing POCUS findings correlating with other HF measures and diuretic effect found that IVC diameter changed significantly with diuretic administration (p<0.05). All 6 studies assessing POCUS as a predictor of long-term mortality or hospital readmission found measures that achieved statistical significance with p<0.05. Including POCUS as standard-of-care - both as a diagnostic tool in the emergency department and a management tool in in-patient and out-patient facilities - may improve the treatment of HF.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
Cardiac point of care ultrasound (POCUS) has shown increasing utility as a tool for diagnosing and managing heart failure (HF). Within cardiology, intravascular volume assessment leveraging visualization of the inferior vena cava (IVC) is a central aspect of care, as IVC size correlates with central venous pressure. This targeted literature review aimed to examine the existing literature assessing the use of POCUS in diagnosis and management of HF patients utilizing POCUS-based IVC measurement either alone or in combination with secondary methods.
METHODS
METHODS
A targeted PubMed and Ovid database search up until August 28, 2023 using a keyword search was completed. Studies that did not include IVC assessment with POCUS in HF were excluded.
RESULTS
RESULTS
The initial search using both PubMed and Ovid resulted in 370 journal publications. After exclusion criteria were used 15 studies were included in the review. Studies were grouped into three categories: 1) how well POCUS was able to identify HF, 2) whether POCUS-based findings correlated with other measures evaluating HF and was able to predict the effect of diuretic administration, and 3) whether POCUS-based findings served as a good prognostic indicator. The 5 studies that evaluated HF identification with POCUS found that both diagnostic sensitivity and specificity may reach 90%-100% when IVC measurement was coupled with a lung ultrasound assessing the presence of B-lines or pleural effusion. Five studies assessing POCUS findings correlating with other HF measures and diuretic effect found that IVC diameter changed significantly with diuretic administration (p<0.05). All 6 studies assessing POCUS as a predictor of long-term mortality or hospital readmission found measures that achieved statistical significance with p<0.05.
CONCLUSIONS
CONCLUSIONS
Including POCUS as standard-of-care - both as a diagnostic tool in the emergency department and a management tool in in-patient and out-patient facilities - may improve the treatment of HF.
Identifiants
pubmed: 38681155
doi: 10.24908/pocus.v9i1.16795
pmc: PMC11044942
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Review
Langues
eng
Pagination
117-130Informations de copyright
Copyright (c) 2024 Sabina Yampolsky, Alan Kwan, Susan Cheng, Ilan Kedan.
Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts
The authors report no relevant disclosures or conflicts of interests related to this work.