2020
DOI: 10.1111/anae.15082
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Point‐of‐care lung ultrasound in patients with COVID‐19 – a narrative review

Abstract: Summary Ultrasound imaging of the lung and associated tissues may play an important role in the management of patients with COVID‐19–associated lung injury. Compared with other monitoring modalities, such as auscultation or radiographic imaging, we argue lung ultrasound has high diagnostic accuracy, is ergonomically favourable and has fewer infection control implications. By informing the initiation, escalation, titration and weaning of respiratory support, lung ultrasound can be integrated into COVID‐19 care … Show more

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Cited by 305 publications
(398 citation statements)
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“…Assessment of the severity of lung damage. For this purpose, combining the number of affected areas with the ultrasound appearance was proposed [10]. The ultrasound aspect defines lung damage as:…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…Assessment of the severity of lung damage. For this purpose, combining the number of affected areas with the ultrasound appearance was proposed [10]. The ultrasound aspect defines lung damage as:…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To express the severity of lung damage at a given time and to be able to assess the evolution of the disease, a severity score was imagined. A total of 12 lung areas are evaluated, each of which can receive a maximum of 3 points of severity so that the theoretical maximum score is 36 points [10]. Criteria for awarding points:…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…In our article [2], we presented mechanisms by which a sub-set of these skills could be rapidly gained by clinicians with a range of pre-existing ultrasound imaging and/or respiratory and critical care experience.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%