2009
DOI: 10.1007/s00068-009-9090-4
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Resuscitative Long-Bone Sonography for the Clinician: Usefulness and Pitfalls of Focused Clinical Ultrasound to Detect Long-Bone Fractures During Trauma Resuscitation

Abstract: Bone has one of the highest acoustic densities (AD) in the human body. Traditionally, bone has been considered to be a hindrance to the use of ultrasound (US), as US waves are reflected by the dense matrix and obscure underlying structures. The intense wave reflection, however, can clearly illustrate the cortical bony anatomy of long bones, making cortical disruption obvious. Ultrasound can be used at the bedside concurrently with the overall trauma resuscitation, and may potentially limit the patient's and tr… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…For long-bone sonography in trauma resuscitations, pitfalls include the presence of cortical irregularities resulting in ultrasound signal scatter, resulting in a degraded image and interfering with interpretation of the scan, and artifacts generated by pathologic bone, which can also degrade image quality. 15 Fractures are traditionally sonographically identified by subperiosteal hematomas, bending or deformity, cortical disruption, and reverberating echoes. Our case demonstrated cortical disruption and reverberating echoes.…”
Section: Review Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For long-bone sonography in trauma resuscitations, pitfalls include the presence of cortical irregularities resulting in ultrasound signal scatter, resulting in a degraded image and interfering with interpretation of the scan, and artifacts generated by pathologic bone, which can also degrade image quality. 15 Fractures are traditionally sonographically identified by subperiosteal hematomas, bending or deformity, cortical disruption, and reverberating echoes. Our case demonstrated cortical disruption and reverberating echoes.…”
Section: Review Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%