Point-of-Care Ultrasound Techniques for the Small Animal Practitioner. Группа авторов

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Point-of-Care Ultrasound Techniques for the Small Animal Practitioner - Группа авторов

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modalities for nearly every patient as an extension of the physical examination. However, to better grasp this concept with baby steps to get to “an extension of the physical examination” mentality, we have bulleted the following.

       All blunt and penetrating trauma cases as standard of care for screening for indirect evidence of intraabdominal injury.

       All collapsed (both recovered and unrecovered) cases with unexplained hypotension, tachycardia, or mentation changes.

       All anemic cases.

       All “ain’t doing right” (ADR) cases.

       All postinterventional, postsurgical cases, at risk for bleeding, infections, vascular complications.

       All peritonitis suspects, including acute abdomen, for expedient diagnosis through the detection of free fluid (and sampling, fluid analysis testing as deemed appropriate).

       Add‐on for all POCUS exams (abdomen, thorax, eye, brain) to make sure that forms of peritonitis and pleuritis, presence of bleeding, cardiac and pulmonary complications are not being missed that could have easily been detected with the Global FAST* approach.

      *The Global FAST approach includes the combination of AFAST and its fluid scoring system and its target organ approach, the TFAST and Vet BLUE combined as part of the physical examination (see Chapters 36 and 37).

       Objectives

       Perform the five acoustic windows of AFAST and accurately assign and abdominal fluid score.

       Apply the “small‐volume bleeder versus large‐volume bleeder” principle to hemorrhaging subsets of small animal patients to better direct definitive therapy and decision making, including the need for blood transfusion and exploratory surgery and medical versus surgical management.

       Recognize sonographic striation of the gallbladder wall referred to as the “halo effect,” “double rim effect” or “halo sign.”

       Know additional rule‐outs (cardiac causes) for the collapsed or acutely weak dog with sonographic striation of the gallbladder wall.

       Know additional rule‐outs for sonographic striation of the gallbladder wall in dogs and cats without acute collapse and weakness.

       Recognize retroperitoneal free fluid and distinguish it from intraabdominal fluid.

       Recognize pleural and pericardial effusion via the DH view by looking cranial to the diaphragm.

       Know how to assess volume status through characterization of the caudal vena cava and its associated hepatic veins.

       Know common artifacts and pitfalls at each respective AFAST view (see Chapter 6).

       Final Note

      The POCUS abdominal, thoracic, ocular, neurological, and musculoskeletal examinations described throughout this textbook, should as a general rule always include an AFAST and an assigned abdominal fluid score, and even better the Global FAST approach. By only performing a POCUS examination targeted at a specific organ or system, you risk missing obvious significant conditions to the patient's detriment. Integration of POCUS information is now similarly being advocated in human medicine like the author's Global FAST approach (Lichtenstein 2010; Narasimhan et al. 2016; Ha and Yo 2016).

Image described by caption and surrounding text.

      Source: Reproduced with permission of Dr Gregory Lisciandro, Hill Country Veterinary Specialists and FASTVet.com, Spicewood, TX. Illustration by Hannah M. Cole, Adkins, TX.

       Modification of the Abdominal Fluid Scoring System – Using Maximum Dimensions

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