Author: Chiem, Alan T.; Lim, George W.; Tabibnia, Amir P.; Takemoto, Andrea S.; Weingrow, Daniel M.; Shibata, Jacqueline E.
Title: Feasibility of patientâ€performed lung ultrasound selfâ€exams (Patientâ€PLUS) as a potential approach to telemedicine in heart failure Cord-id: hqtgv4n7 Document date: 2021_7_20
ID: hqtgv4n7
Snippet: AIMS: Patientâ€performed lung ultrasound (LUS) in a heart failure (HF) telemedicine model may be used to monitor worsening pulmonary oedema and to titrate therapy, potentially reducing HF admission. The aim of the study was to assess the feasibility of training HF patients to perform a LUS selfâ€exam in a telemedicine model. METHODS AND RESULTS: A pilot study was conducted at a public hospital involving subjects with a history of HF. After a 15 min training session involving a tutorial video,
Document: AIMS: Patientâ€performed lung ultrasound (LUS) in a heart failure (HF) telemedicine model may be used to monitor worsening pulmonary oedema and to titrate therapy, potentially reducing HF admission. The aim of the study was to assess the feasibility of training HF patients to perform a LUS selfâ€exam in a telemedicine model. METHODS AND RESULTS: A pilot study was conducted at a public hospital involving subjects with a history of HF. After a 15 min training session involving a tutorial video, subjects performed a fourâ€zone LUS using a handheld ultrasound. Exams were saved on a remote server and independently reviewed by two LUS experts. Studies were determined interpretable according to a strict definition: the presence of an intercostal space, and the presence of Aâ€lines, Bâ€lines, or both. Subjects also answered a questionnaire to gather feedback and assess selfâ€efficacy. The median age of 44 subjects was 53 years (range, 36–64). Thirty (68%) were male. Last educational level attained was high school or below for 31 subjects (70%), and oneâ€third used Spanish as their preferred language. One hundred fifty of 175 lung zones (85%) were interpretable, with expert agreement of 87% and a kappa of 0.49. 98% of subjects reported that they could perform this LUS selfâ€exam at home. CONCLUSIONS: This pilot study reports that training HF patients to perform a LUS selfâ€exam is feasible, with reported high selfâ€efficacy. This supports further investigation into a telemedicine model using LUS to reduce emergency department visits and hospitalizations associated with HF.
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