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Determination of Left Ventricular Function by Emergency Physician Echocardiography of Hypotensive Patients
191
Citations
29
References
2002
Year
HypertensionHeart FailureAdult Cardiac SurgeryDiastolic FunctionAcute Myocardial InfarctionEmergency PhysiciansLeft Ventricular FunctionWeighted KappaPublic HealthCardiologyCardiac MechanicCardiovascular ImagingMyocardial InfarctionEmergency Physician EchocardiographyHypotensive PatientsCardiac CareCardiovascular DiseaseEchocardiography TrainingPatient SafetyMedicineEmergency Medicine
Objective: To determine whether emergency physicians (EPs) with goal‐directed training can use echocardiography to accurately assess left ventricular function (LVF) in hypotensive emergency department (ED) patients. Methods: Prospective, observational study at an urban teaching ED with >100,000 visits/year. Four EP investigators with prior ultrasound experience underwent focused echocardiography training. A convenience sample of 51 adult patients with symptomatic hypotension was enrolled. Exclusion criteria were a history of trauma, chest compressions, or electrocardiogram diagnostic of acute myocardial infarction. A five‐view transthoracic echocardiogram was recorded by an EP investigator who estimated ejection fraction (EF) and categorized LVF as normal, depressed, or severely depressed. A blinded cardiologist reviewed all 51 studies for EF, categorization of function, and quality of the study. Twenty randomly selected studies were reviewed by a second cardiologist to determine interobserver variability. Results: Comparison of EP vs. primary cardiologist estimate of EF yielded a Pearson's correlation coefficient R = 0.86. This compared favorably with interobserver correlation between cardiologists (R = 0.84). In categorization of LVF, the weighted agreement between EPs and the primary cardiologist was 84%, with a weighted kappa of 0.61 (p < 0.001). Echocardiographic quality was rated by the primary cardiologist as good in 33%, moderate in 43%, and poor in 22%. The EF was significantly lower in patients with a cardiac cause of hypotension vs. other patients (25 ± 10% vs. 48 ± 17%, p < 0.001). Conclusions: Emergency physicians with focused training in echocardiography can accurately determine LVF in hypotensive patients.
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