医学
超声波
组内相关
重症监护室
注射器
喂食管
重症监护
人口
放射科
外科
重症监护医学
临床心理学
环境卫生
精神科
心理测量学
作者
Evgeni Brotfain,Alexander Erblat,Peter Luft,Adina Elir,Benjamin F. Gruenbaum,Ilana Livshiz‐Riven,Anna Koyfman,Danielle Fridrich,Leonid Koyfman,Michael Friger,Ana Grivnev,Alexander Zlotnik,Moti Klein
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.iccn.2021.103183
摘要
Ultrasonography is an essential imaging modality in the critical care population and has been increasingly utilized to check gastric residual volume . Various studies have shown that intensive care unit nurses untrained in ultrasound can easily be trained in its accurate interpretation. We prospectively analyzed nurse-performed repeated measurements of gastric residual volume and nasogastric tube positioning via an ultrasound technique in the intensive care unit.This was a single-center, cross-sectional prospective study. Four intensive care unit nurses, evenly divided into two groups (teams A and B), underwent four hours of formal ultrasound training by three critical care staff physicians. The trained nurses provided bedside ultrasound assessments of gastric residual volume and nasogastric tube positioning which were compared to a standard protocol of syringe aspiration.Ninety patients were recruited to the study. Four measurements per patient were performed, for a total of 360 assessments. The ultrasound gastric residual volume assessments were correlated with the syringe aspiration protocol and demonstrated high Intraclass Correlation Coefficient rates of 0.814 (0.61-0.92) for team A and 0.85 (0.58-0.91) for team B. Nasogastric tube placement was successfully and independently verified by ultrasound in most of the critically ill patients (78% of team A and 70% of team B). The comparative ultrasound assessments of tube positioning demonstrated good correlation of 0.733 (0.51-0.88) between each team's two independent observers.Our study demonstrated a strong correlation between US utilization for assessment of gastric residual volume and nasogastric tube positioning and standard protocol methods, suggesting it is a safe, simple and effective practice for intensive care unit nurses.
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