Can emergency medicine residents detect acute deep venous thrombosis with a limited, two-site ultrasound examination?
Publication/Presentation Date
2-1-2007
Abstract
The purpose of this prospective clinical study was to determine the ability of Emergency Medicine (EM) residents to accurately detect acute deep venous thrombosis (aDVT) after training in a limited, two-site examination. Six residents received a 90-min session consisting of a lecture and a hands-on component. Each resident then performed the examination on symptomatic extremities referred to the vascular laboratory of a community teaching hospital. The examination was limited to the femoral and popliteal sites and was considered normal when the vein completely compressed. A formal examination was completed by the vascular technician (who was blinded to the resident's results) within 30 min of the resident examination. Of the 121 symptomatic extremities, vascular technicians detected nine cases of aDVT in the target area (7% prevalence); resident examinations revealed eight of these (sensitivity 89%). EM residents can perform a limited duplex examination with considerable but not perfect accuracy after receiving very limited instruction.
Volume
32
Issue
2
First Page
197
Last Page
200
ISSN
0736-4679
Published In/Presented At
Jacoby, J., Cesta, M., Axelband, J., Melanson, S., Heller, M., & Reed, J. (2007). Can emergency medicine residents detect acute deep venous thrombosis with a limited, two-site ultrasound examination?. The Journal of emergency medicine, 32(2), 197–200. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jemermed.2006.06.008
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
17307633
Department(s)
Department of Emergency Medicine
Document Type
Article