Stephanie Gräger, Markus Puschmann, Michael Lorenz, Martin Krämer, Hans-Joachim Mentzel, Katja Glutig
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Lung ultrasound is becoming increasingly important in the diagnosis of acute and chronic lung disease, especially in children and adolescents. In children with cystic fibrosis (CF), conventional radiography or computed tomography (CT) has been the main modality used to evaluate acute pneumonia or the progression of chronic lung disease. This Study aimed to evaluate Lung-Ultrasound as a diagnostic tool for children and adolescents with CF.
Methods: We examined 30 CF patients with lung ultrasound before and after spirometry and compared them with lung ultrasounds of 15 lung-healthy children. We used a comprehensive and complete examination procedure with 12 probe positions to determine the best examination procedure in retrospect. In addition, an acceptance survey was conducted among the children and adolescents after the examination.
Results: There was a significant difference in pleural irregularities, B-lines, consolidations and the adapted Peixoto et al. score between CF patients and healthy children before spirometry. We found excellent discrimination between patients and lung-healthy subjects using the Peixoto-score (AUC 0.968), pleural irregularities (AUC 0.890. CF patients had more B-lines, more consolidations, and a higher Peixoto score (mean difference 7.7 points).There was no significant difference in lung ultrasound results in children with CF before and after spirometry. Shortening our extended examination procedure would minimally compromise diagnostic accuracy. The lung ultrasound examination was well accepted by the children.
Conclusion: We could demonstrate that lung ultrasound is a sensitive and reliable method for assessing pulmonary changes in cystic fibrosis.
期刊介绍:
Respiratory Medicine is an internationally-renowned journal devoted to the rapid publication of clinically-relevant respiratory medicine research. It combines cutting-edge original research with state-of-the-art reviews dealing with all aspects of respiratory diseases and therapeutic interventions. Topics include adult and paediatric medicine, epidemiology, immunology and cell biology, physiology, occupational disorders, and the role of allergens and pollutants.
Respiratory Medicine is increasingly the journal of choice for publication of phased trial work, commenting on effectiveness, dosage and methods of action.