Focused cardiac ultrasound is feasible in the general practice setting and alters diagnosis and management of cardiac disease

Background: Ultrasound-assisted examination of the cardiovascular system with focused cardiac ultrasound by the treating physician is non-invasive and changes diagnosis and management of patient’s with suspected cardiac disease. This has not been reported in a general practice setting. Aim: To dete...

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Main Authors: James Yates, Colin Forbes Royse, Carolyn Royse, Alistair George Royse, David Jeffrey Canty
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bioscientifica 2016-08-01
Series:Echo Research and Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.echorespract.com/content/3/3/63.full
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spelling doaj-257e5fa33d6b4ad08815b485998af97b2020-11-24T21:48:28ZengBioscientificaEcho Research and Practice2055-04642055-04642016-08-0133636910.1530/ERP-16-0026Focused cardiac ultrasound is feasible in the general practice setting and alters diagnosis and management of cardiac diseaseJames Yates0Colin Forbes Royse1Carolyn Royse2Alistair George Royse3David Jeffrey Canty4The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, AustraliaDepartment of Surgery, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia; Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Management, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Victoria, AustraliaNillumbik and Research Medical Centre, Eltham, Victoria, AustraliaDepartment of Surgery, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia; Department of Surgery, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Victoria, AustraliaDepartment of Surgery, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia; Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Management, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Victoria, Australia; Department of Medicine, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia; Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine, Clayton, Victoria, AustraliaBackground: Ultrasound-assisted examination of the cardiovascular system with focused cardiac ultrasound by the treating physician is non-invasive and changes diagnosis and management of patient’s with suspected cardiac disease. This has not been reported in a general practice setting. Aim: To determine whether focused cardiac ultrasound performed on patients aged over 50 years changes the diagnosis and management of cardiac disease by a general practitioner. Design and setting: A prospective observational study of 80 patients aged over 50 years and who had not received echocardiography or chest CT within 12 months presenting to a general practice. Method: Clinical assessment and management of significant cardiac disorders in patients presenting to general practitioners were recorded before and after focused cardiac ultrasound. Echocardiography was performed by a medical student with sufficient training, which was verified by an expert. Differences in diagnosis and management between conventional and ultrasound-assisted assessment were recorded. Results and conclusion: Echocardiography and interpretation were acceptable in all patients. Significant cardiac disease was detected in 16 (20%) patients, including aortic stenosis in 9 (11%) and cardiac failure in 7 (9%), which were missed by clinical examination in 10 (62.5%) of these patients. Changes in management occurred in 12 patients (15% overall and 75% of those found to have significant cardiac disease) including referral for diagnostic echocardiography in 8 (10%), commencement of heart failure treatment in 3 (4%) and referral to a cardiologist in 1 patient (1%). Routine focused cardiac ultrasound is feasible and frequently alters the diagnosis and management of cardiac disease in patients aged over 50 years presenting to a general practice. http://www.echorespract.com/content/3/3/63.fullechocardiographydiagnosisechocardiography and managementfeasibilityhand-carried ultrasound
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James Yates
Colin Forbes Royse
Carolyn Royse
Alistair George Royse
David Jeffrey Canty
spellingShingle James Yates
Colin Forbes Royse
Carolyn Royse
Alistair George Royse
David Jeffrey Canty
Focused cardiac ultrasound is feasible in the general practice setting and alters diagnosis and management of cardiac disease
Echo Research and Practice
echocardiography
diagnosis
echocardiography and management
feasibility
hand-carried ultrasound
author_facet James Yates
Colin Forbes Royse
Carolyn Royse
Alistair George Royse
David Jeffrey Canty
author_sort James Yates
title Focused cardiac ultrasound is feasible in the general practice setting and alters diagnosis and management of cardiac disease
title_short Focused cardiac ultrasound is feasible in the general practice setting and alters diagnosis and management of cardiac disease
title_full Focused cardiac ultrasound is feasible in the general practice setting and alters diagnosis and management of cardiac disease
title_fullStr Focused cardiac ultrasound is feasible in the general practice setting and alters diagnosis and management of cardiac disease
title_full_unstemmed Focused cardiac ultrasound is feasible in the general practice setting and alters diagnosis and management of cardiac disease
title_sort focused cardiac ultrasound is feasible in the general practice setting and alters diagnosis and management of cardiac disease
publisher Bioscientifica
series Echo Research and Practice
issn 2055-0464
2055-0464
publishDate 2016-08-01
description Background: Ultrasound-assisted examination of the cardiovascular system with focused cardiac ultrasound by the treating physician is non-invasive and changes diagnosis and management of patient’s with suspected cardiac disease. This has not been reported in a general practice setting. Aim: To determine whether focused cardiac ultrasound performed on patients aged over 50 years changes the diagnosis and management of cardiac disease by a general practitioner. Design and setting: A prospective observational study of 80 patients aged over 50 years and who had not received echocardiography or chest CT within 12 months presenting to a general practice. Method: Clinical assessment and management of significant cardiac disorders in patients presenting to general practitioners were recorded before and after focused cardiac ultrasound. Echocardiography was performed by a medical student with sufficient training, which was verified by an expert. Differences in diagnosis and management between conventional and ultrasound-assisted assessment were recorded. Results and conclusion: Echocardiography and interpretation were acceptable in all patients. Significant cardiac disease was detected in 16 (20%) patients, including aortic stenosis in 9 (11%) and cardiac failure in 7 (9%), which were missed by clinical examination in 10 (62.5%) of these patients. Changes in management occurred in 12 patients (15% overall and 75% of those found to have significant cardiac disease) including referral for diagnostic echocardiography in 8 (10%), commencement of heart failure treatment in 3 (4%) and referral to a cardiologist in 1 patient (1%). Routine focused cardiac ultrasound is feasible and frequently alters the diagnosis and management of cardiac disease in patients aged over 50 years presenting to a general practice.
topic echocardiography
diagnosis
echocardiography and management
feasibility
hand-carried ultrasound
url http://www.echorespract.com/content/3/3/63.full
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