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What do you all think about using ultrasound during transport? Some paramedics are using it already and have had a lot of success. What are your thoughts?
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Does it really effect treatment? If a person is presenting in a way I would suspect an internal bleed, my treatment will be tailored to fit their needs. I will call a trauma alert, and a trauma surg will be there to address any immediate life threats and/or internal bleeds. If my field impression is a PE, that's what I will treat and what my field impression will be in my call in to the hospital. I just don't see it being worth it in an urban system. Maybe in rural areas where specialists are on call and not at the hospital, but when transport times are so short in most urban systems- an ultrasound seems like it would just take up time that could be used to preform medical interventions instead of just confirming suspicions.Actually, I've found it quite useful in urban EMS. And in considering its uses, probably more so than in the critical care realm. From FAST exams, lung exams, PEA evaluation, and even stroke screening, ultrasound is very versatile and very sensitive in its findings. If they can find a way to start bringing the probe price down, I think US will start to become very prevalent in the field.
I've actually caught a liver laceration that wasn't yet presenting with a high suspicion of a bleed. I only checked because of a mildly suspicious mechanism and I had a new toy to play with. The new toy changed my hospital selection.Does it really effect treatment? If a person is presenting in a way I would suspect an internal bleed, my treatment will be tailored to fit their needs. I will call a trauma alert, and a trauma surg will be there to address any immediate life threats and/or internal bleeds. If my field impression is a PE, that's what I will treat and what my field impression will be in my call in to the hospital. I just don't see it being worth it in an urban system. Maybe in rural areas where specialists are on call and not at the hospital, but when transport times are so short in most urban systems- an ultrasound seems like it would just take up time that could be used to preform medical interventions instead of just confirming suspicions.
In a flight setting I could see it being used more to assist with pericardiocentesis and chest tube placements etc, but in a typical EMS system, I just don't see a need for it.
Like I stated, this may be worth it in a rural area with a longer response time, or in a flight situation, but in a typical urban system where transports are short- it's not efficient.I've actually caught a liver laceration that wasn't yet presenting with a high suspicion of a bleed. I only checked because of a mildly suspicious mechanism and I had a new toy to play with. The new toy changed my hospital selection.
Our Trauma teams will also activate the OR with a positive FAST exam via radio report.
Have you ever had the respiratory patients that are very difficult to tell the pathology of? CHF vs COPD? I can tell you with absolute certainty whether it's broncoconstriction or fluid faster than you can apply an EtCO2 monitor (literally- my partner and i have tested it), and more definitively than EtCO2. The finding will guide treatment.
Does your patient with PEA have cardiac standstill, or just such a low cardiac output that you can't palpate a pulse? That will also guide treatment. Or a PEA with PE findings? That could make you more likely to transport immediately depending on arrest time and proximity to the ED. And your traumatic arrest with tamponade? Perform CPR on them and you're signing their death certificate. Fluid boluses, possibly pressors, and early transport greatly increases these patients' likelihood of survival. Without being able to visualize the heart, tamponades get missed quite frequently.
And I'm still a novice at US. @Jon is far more proficient and knowledgeable of the tool's usages. I'm constantly discovering new uses for ultrasound that actually help in guiding decisions.
I've actually caught a liver laceration that wasn't yet presenting with a high suspicion of a bleed. I only checked because of a mildly suspicious mechanism and I had a new toy to play with. The new toy changed my hospital selection.
Our Trauma teams will also activate the OR with a positive FAST exam via radio report.
Have you ever had the respiratory patients that are very difficult to tell the pathology of? CHF vs COPD? I can tell you with absolute certainty whether it's broncoconstriction or fluid faster than you can apply an EtCO2 monitor (literally- my partner and i have tested it), and more definitively than EtCO2. The finding will guide treatment.
Does your patient with PEA have cardiac standstill, or just such a low cardiac output that you can't palpate a pulse? That will also guide treatment. Or a PEA with PE findings? That could make you more likely to transport immediately depending on arrest time and proximity to the ED. And your traumatic arrest with tamponade? Perform CPR on them and you're signing their death certificate. Fluid boluses, possibly pressors, and early transport greatly increases these patients' likelihood of survival. Without being able to visualize the heart, tamponades get missed quite frequently.
And I'm still a novice at US. @Jon is far more proficient and knowledgeable of the tool's usages. I'm constantly discovering new uses for ultrasound that actually help in guiding decisions.
To each their own. It would probably be more appropriate for some systems then others.
We're lucky in that we have access to many different physicians and train with them at a minimum of 8hrs monthly. Our initial training on ultrasound came from an EM doc who just completed an US fellowship during a week long class. Much of my education has been self-imposed, though. While my education is far from that of someone who went to school for sonography, I've got a basic understanding of the physics of it and what I'm looking at.I'm curious what type of education you've had on US?
I am writing a research paper about US use in EMS and I am wondering if you all could share your thoughts or concerns about the topic. Please and thank you!
Actually, I've found it quite useful in urban EMS. And in considering its uses, probably more so than in the critical care realm. From FAST exams, lung exams, PEA evaluation, and even stroke screening, ultrasound is very versatile and very sensitive in its findings. If they can find a way to start bringing the probe price down, I think US will start to become very prevalent in the field.
What do you all think about using ultrasound during transport? Some paramedics are using it already and have had a lot of success. What are your thoughts?