POCUS Study Guide (copy)

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22 Terms

1
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What is a POCUS?

Bedside US performed by clinician to provide immediate info for diagnosis and management; widely used in EM/ critical care/ IM/ and other specialties

2
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What is ultrasound physics?

understanding sound waves, frequency, and interaction of ultrasound with tissues

3
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What is image acquisition?

proper probe selection, positioning, and movement (sliding, tilting, rotating)

4
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How will weak reflectors appear?

As black on the screen, Anechoic (causes posterior enhancement)
-soundwaves passes through them, very few echoes return to probe
ex: blood, cysts, seromas, effusions, ascites, free fluid

5
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How do strong reflectors appear?

Appear as White, Hyperechoic (causes posterior shadowing)
-most soundwaves bounce off the structure and reflect back to the probe
ex: bone, gallstones, kidney stones, diaphragm, pleura, air

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What is the purpose of cardiac focused assessment with sonography for trauma (FAST)?

Rapid assessment for free fluid in the pericardium, pleural spaces and peritoneum

7
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What are views in focus assessment with sonography for trauma?

Subxiphoid, parasternal long axis, apical four chamber, subcostal views

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What is the purpose of echocardiography?

Assess cardiac function, chamber size, presence of pericardial effusion

9
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What are the views for echocardiography?

Parasternal long axis, parasternal short axis, apical four chamber, subcostal

10
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What is the purpose of a lung ultrasound?

Evaluate for pneumothorax, pleural effusion, pulmonary edema, consolidation

11
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What findings are seen on a lung US for a patient with pneumothorax?

Absence of lung sliding, presence of “lung point”

12
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What findings are seen on a lung US for a patient with pleural effusion?

Anechoic or hypoechoic fluid collection

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What findings are seen on a lung US for a patient with pulmonary edema?

B lines (comet tail artifacts)

14
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What findings are seen on a lung US for a patient with Consolidation?

Hepatization of lung tissue, air bronchograms

15
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What finding would indicate an anuerysm?

Aortic diameter >3cm

16
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What findings could you see in the gallbladder?

Gallstones, thickened gallbladder wall, pericholecystic fluid
*evaluate for cholecystitis and cholelithiasis

17
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What findings could you see in the kidneys?

Dilated renal pelvis and calyces, echogenic stones with shadowing
*assess for hydronephrosis and renal stones

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What findings could you see in a patient with DVT?

Lack of compressibility, presence of thrombus
*compression US of common femoral, superficial femoral, popliteal veins

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What findings would you see in a joint effusion?

Anechoic or hypoechoic fluid collection
*detect fluid in joints

20
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what findings could you see in fractures?

Cortical disruption, step-off
*identify bone discontinuity

21
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What ocular findings could you see?

Retinal detachment (hyperechoic membrane), optic nerve sheath diameter > 5mm

22
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What technique should you use for nerve blocks?

Identify target nerve, visualize needle path
*guide needle placement for regional anesthesia