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Stacked Wooden Logs

Ultrasound: Trauma E-FAST

Purpose: identify acute traumatic pathology including presence of pericardial fluid, pneumothorax, and intra-abdominal fluid.


Probe

  • Can use curvilinear probe, but usually switch to the phased array for the cardiac view, so it might be easiest to just use a phased array for the whole study.

  • The linear probe can also be used when evaluating for pneumothorax through the anterior chest wall.


Abdominal Cavity

  • Assess for fluid in 3 different regions of the peritoneal cavity.

  • Can use curvilinear probe, but usually switch to the phased array for the cardiac view, so it might be easiest to just use a phased array for the whole study.

  • Right upper quadrant- 1) between liver and kidney [Morrison's pouch], 2) tip of the liver in the right paracolic gutter, 3) lower right hemithorax

  • Left upper quadrant- 1) between the spleen and kidney, 2) subdiaphragmatic space, 3) tip of the spleen in the left paracolic gutter, 4) lower left hemithorax

  • Pelvic- males- between bladder and rectum, females- behind the uterus, anterior to the rectum (pouch of Douglas). Image in transverse and sagittal planes.


Cardiac

  • The phased-array or curvilinear probe can be used. The probe is placed inferior and to the right of xiphoid, pointed to left shoulder, with the probe in a horizontal plane (not directed to the bed).

  • Identify presence of hemopericardium (4th trans-abdominal window of the FAST).

  • Assess gross function (contractility).

  • Assess volume status- full or collapsed left ventricle.


Thoracic cavity- The “E” in E-FAST

  • The linear probe is used to identify oresence of a pneumothorax. It is placed in the mid clavicular line, oriented cephalad-caudad, 3rd-4th intercostal space. Pneumothorax is present when there is lack of apposition of the pleural lining to the chest wall which leads to loss of lung sliding. Also no comet tail artifact or lung pulse, presence of a lung point (where the pleural surfaces meet, the junction between sliding and absence of sliding).

  • The curvilinear or phased array probe can be used to identify hemothorax by visualizing fluid above the diaphragm in the upper quadrants abdominal views.


References

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