The Journal of Trauma

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The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care:
March 1997 - Volume 42 - Issue 3 - pp 384-390
Article

Ultrasound Evaluation of Blunt Abdominal Trauma: Program Implementation, Initial Experience, and Learning Curve

Thomas, Bruce DO; Falcone, Robert E. MD; Vasquez, Donald DO; Santanello, Steven DO; Townsend, Michael MD; Hockenberry, Scott MD; Innes, Jeffrey MD; Wanamaker, Steven MD

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Abstract

Objective: Although sonographic screening for blunt abdominal trauma is gaining acceptance, standards for implementation, training, credentialing, and quality control remain to be established.

Design: This prospective study examines a Level I trauma service experience with the de novo establishment of a trauma ultrasound (US) program credentialed through the Department of Surgery under the auspices of Continuous Quality Improvement.

Materials and Methods: All trauma surgeons attended a combined didactic and "hands on" 8-hour trauma US course. Abdominal sonography was subsequently performed on patients with potential blunt abdominal trauma followed by a standard diagnostic evaluation, which included computed tomographic scan, diagnostic peritoneal lavage, or observation.

Measurements and Main Results: Three hundred patients were studied over a 4-month period. They averaged 35 years of age with an average injury severity score of 12. The time required to perform the US examination averaged less than 3 minutes. Standard diagnostic evaluation included computed tomographic scan (21%), diagnostic peritoneal lavage (45%), and observation (34%). US examinations resulted in 277 true negatives, 17 true positives, two false positives, and four false negatives for a sensitivity of 81.0%, a specificity of 99.3%, and an accuracy of 98.0%. Annualized cost savings with the use of US evaluation versus standard diagnostic evaluation would amount to over $100,000.00.

Conclusions: This experience with the de novo implementation of a trauma US program suggests that the training and credentialing requirements in this study are sufficient to provide surgeon ultrasonographers with acceptable competence in US diagnosis of blunt abdominal trauma.

© Williams & Wilkins 1997. All Rights Reserved.

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