ULTRASONOGRAPHIC ASSESSMENT OF LUNG IN DYSPNEIC PATIENTS WITH LUNG INFECTION
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Published:2023-02-01
Issue:
Volume:
Page:30-32
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ISSN:
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Container-title:INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
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language:en
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Short-container-title:ijsr
Author:
Kammari Bhagyasri1, Singh Rathore Falguni2, K. Patil J.3
Affiliation:
1. Junior Resident 3, Department of Radiology, Dr. D.Y. Patil Medical College Hospital, and Research Institute, Kolhapur, Maharashtra. 2. JR 3, Department of Radiology, Dr. D.Y. Patil Medical College Hospital, and Research Institute, Kolhapur, Maharashtra 3. MD DNB, Associate Professor, Department of Radiology, Dr. D.Y. Patil Medical College Hospital, and Research Institute, Kolhapur, Maharashtra
Abstract
Introduction- A wide range of pulmonary illnesses with a signicant clinical prevalence includes infectious lung disease. Numerous studies have
examined the clinical value of lung ultrasonography (LUS) in the treatment of patients who present with dyspnea due to an infectious lung illness in
the last ten years. We present data on the methodical and standardised use of bedside LUS in the differential diagnosis of patients with acute
dyspnea due to infective pulmonary diseases. We conducted a cross-sectional s Materials and Methods- tudy on 120 patients with infectious lung
illnesses (mean age, 54.2± 11.5 years; range, 25-85 years; 40 women, 80 men). All individuals underwent a chest X-ray and bedside LUS using a
convex probe. A clinically necessary chest CT was done on a subgroup of individuals. By Results- comparing the percentage of pleural effusion
and pulmonary consolidation determined by LUS to X-ray, we found a statistically signicant difference (54 vs. 20.8%, respectively, p 0.05; 90 vs.
46.6%, p 0.001). 38.3% of the LUS-detected consolidations had air bronchograms, which were mixed, hypo, and hyperechoic lesions. When
conducted, chest CT veried every nding determined by LUS. LUS is a helpful suppl Conclusion- emental technique when used in conjunction
with clinical, laboratory, and radiographic workup, as specied by clinical guidelines. When there are chest X-ray visible opacities or when clinical
suspicion is high and radiological results are negative, the approach is very helpful in differentiating between pleural effusion and lung
consolidation.
Publisher
World Wide Journals
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,General Environmental Science,Education,Education,General Social Sciences,General Mathematics,General Physics and Astronomy,General Materials Science,General Chemistry,General Medicine,Complementary and alternative medicine,General Medicine,General Medicine
Reference21 articles.
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