Prehospital Ultrasound: A Narrative Review.

Prehosp Emerg Care

Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Published: January 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Point-of-care ultrasound is gaining popularity in prehospital settings, with a growing body of literature exploring its use by EMS personnel.
  • A narrative review identified 193 relevant studies, focusing on experiences in air medical and critical care transport environments, primarily involving trained physicians and advanced practice personnel.
  • While some promising applications have emerged for emergency situations, there is a lack of interventional studies that evaluate the direct impact of prehospital ultrasound on patient outcomes.

Article Abstract

Point-of-care ultrasound is rapidly becoming more prevalent in the prehospital environment. Though considered a relatively new intervention in this setting, there is growing literature that aims to explore the use of prehospital ultrasound by EMS personnel. To better understand and report the state of the science on prehospital ultrasound, we conducted a narrative review of the literature. Following a keyword search of MEDLINE in Ovid from inception to August 2, 2022, 2,564 records were identified and screened. Based on review of abstracts and full texts, with addition of seven articles via bibliography review, 193 records were included. Many included studies detail usage in air medical and other critical care transport environments. Clinicians performing prehospital ultrasound are often physicians or other advanced practice personnel who have previous ultrasound experience, which facilitates implementation in the prehospital setting. Emerging literature details training programs for prehospital personnel who are novices to ultrasound, and implementation for some study types appears feasible without prior experience. Unique use scenarios that show promise include during critical care transport, for triage in austere settings, and for thoracic evaluation of patients at risk of life-threatening pathology. There is a growing mostly observational body of literature describing the use of ultrasound by prehospital personnel. Prehospital ultrasound has demonstrated feasibility for specific conditions, yet interventional studies evaluating benefit to patient outcomes are absent.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10903127.2022.2132332DOI Listing

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