Diferencia entre revisiones de «EBQ:Caval index»

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==Clinical Question==
==Clinical Question==
Can emergency medicine physicians performing beside ultrasound measurement of the caval index predict a central venous pressure of less than 8 mmHg in emergency department patients?  
*Can emergency medicine physicians performing beside ultrasound measurement of the caval index predict a central venous pressure of less than 8 mmHg in emergency department patients?  
 
 


==Conclusion==
==Conclusion==
 
*Bedside ultrasound to measure the caval index can be a useful tool for emergency medicine physicians to predict patients with a central venous pressure of less than 8 mmHg.
Bedside ultrasound to measure the caval index can be a useful tool for emergency medicine physicians to predict patients with a central venous pressure of less than 8 mmHg.
*Specifically collapsibility of greater than 50% with respiration can indicate intravascular volume status.  
 
 
 
Specifically collapsibility of greater than 50% with respiration can indicate intravascular volume status.  
 
 


==Major Points==  
==Major Points==  
==Study Design==
==Population==
===Patient Demographics===
===Inclusion Criteria===
===Exclusion Criteria===
==Interventions==
==Outcomes==
===Primary Outcome===
===Secondary Outcomes===
===Subgroup analysis===
==Criticisms & Further Discussion==
==External Links==
==See Also==
==Funding==
==References==
<references/>
[[Category:EBQ]]





Revisión actual - 22:00 5 jul 2017

incomplete Journal Club Article
Nagdev AD, Merchant RC, Tirado-Gonzalez A, Sisson CA, Murphy MC.. "Emergency department bedside ultrasonographic measurement of the caval index for noninvasive determination of low central venous pressure.". Ann Emerg Med.. 2010. 3(55):290-295.
PubMed Full text PDF

Clinical Question

  • Can emergency medicine physicians performing beside ultrasound measurement of the caval index predict a central venous pressure of less than 8 mmHg in emergency department patients?

Conclusion

  • Bedside ultrasound to measure the caval index can be a useful tool for emergency medicine physicians to predict patients with a central venous pressure of less than 8 mmHg.
  • Specifically collapsibility of greater than 50% with respiration can indicate intravascular volume status.

Major Points

Study Design

Population

Patient Demographics

Inclusion Criteria

Exclusion Criteria

Interventions

Outcomes

Primary Outcome

Secondary Outcomes

Subgroup analysis

Criticisms & Further Discussion

External Links

See Also

Funding

References