Objectives: Although pulmonary abnormalities are easily seen with standard echocardiography or pocket-sized ultrasound devices, we sought to observe the prevalence of lung ultrasound apical B-lines and pleural effusions and their associations with inpatient, 1-year, and 5-year mortality when found in hospitalized patients referred for echocardiography.
Methods: We reviewed 486 initial echocardiograms obtained from consecutive inpatients over a 3-month period, in which each examination included 4 supplemental images of the apex and the base of both lungs. Kaplan-Meier survival curves were used to compare mortality rates among patients with versus without lung findings.
Over the past two decades, our internal medicine residency has created a unique postgraduate education in internal medicine by incorporating a formal curriculum in point-of-care cardiac ultrasound as a mandatory component. The details regarding content and implementation were critical to the initial and subsequent success of this novel program. In this paper, we discuss the evidence-based advances, considerations, and pitfalls that we have encountered in the program's development through the discussion of four unanticipated tasks unique to a point-of-care ultrasound curriculum.
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