TY - JOUR
T1 - The use of echocardiography in the management of shock in critical care
T2 - a prospective, multi-centre, observational study
AU - Flower, Luke
AU - Waite, Alicia
AU - Boulton, Adam
AU - Peck, Marcus
AU - Akhtar, Waqas
AU - Boyle, Andrew J.
AU - Gudibande, Sandeep
AU - Ingram, Thomas E.
AU - Johnston, Brian
AU - Marsh, Sarah
AU - Miller, Ashley
AU - Nash, Amy
AU - Olusanya, Olusegun
AU - Parulekar, Prashant
AU - Wagstaff, Daniel
AU - Wilkinson, Jonathan
AU - Proudfoot, Alastair G.
AU - the NEAT ECHO Collaborators
AU - Dibb, Kevin
AU - MacBrayne, James
AU - Gorman, David
AU - Ostrovsky, Dmitry
AU - Owen, Deborah
AU - Medhora, Jasmine
AU - Barbirou, Emel
AU - Murphy, Piers
AU - Khairnar, Prakash
AU - Agrawal, Amit
AU - Georgieva, Milena
AU - Hall, Christopher
AU - Malhotra, Vikram
AU - Dutton, Jonathan
AU - O’Brien, Bethan
AU - Hamilton, David Oliver
AU - Spinks, Kerry
AU - Macfarlane, Jamie Leigh
AU - Middleton, Dylan
AU - Creswell, Emerson
AU - Gurr, Lucy
AU - Lancaster, Chris
AU - Jeanrenaud, Paul
AU - Conhye, Daniel
AU - Mcgow, Rory
AU - Ezzelarab, Nosaiba
AU - Fedorova, Daria
AU - Kalogirou, Michael
AU - Eldridge, Jack
AU - Butler, Jennifer
AU - Gabriel, Zoë
AU - Burgess, Helen
AU - Bennett, Sean
AU - Eldesoky, Ahmed
AU - Espinoza-Silva, Marko
AU - Rajkhowa, Moloy
AU - Goel, Alisha
AU - Maccaroni, Maria
AU - Sharma, Parimal
AU - Chopde, Shantanu
AU - Khan, Aaqib
AU - Ahmad, Aamir
AU - Dehaley, Suryakant
AU - Montaser, Tamer
AU - Webb, Elizabeth
AU - Rajan, Shilpa
AU - Vochin, Ana
AU - Vijayakumar, Lakshmi Sagar
AU - Adewuyi, Ajibade
AU - Husain, Aatif
AU - Archer, Katie
AU - Iyer, Karthik
AU - Yoon, Jeeyoung
AU - da Silva, Rita Ines Duarte
AU - MacLeodHall, Catherine
AU - Qureshi, Arif
AU - Briggs, Harriet
AU - Duncan, Kitty
AU - Parish, Andrew
AU - Winstanley, Martin
AU - Gatter, Michelle
AU - Rivers, Jon
AU - Sharma, Shiv
AU - Vianelli, Vittoria Ferlisi
AU - Flegg, Kyle
AU - Sanderson, Tom
AU - Mayilsamy, Arun
AU - Ions, Rhiannon
AU - Shahnewaz, Ridwan
AU - Chatzivasiloglou, Foteini
AU - Müller, Charlene Marie
AU - Boroojeny, Ayda Borjian
AU - Farrow, Abbie
AU - Hastings, Francesca
AU - Ahmed, Ayman
AU - Anomelechi, Enyioma
AU - Hobrok, Maria
AU - Medici, Tom
AU - Perry, Ryan
AU - Nail, Akshay
AU - Makmur, Eric
AU - Raj, Shilpa
AU - Patel, Rumaysa
AU - Scott, Jonathan
AU - Anderson, Luke
AU - Wright, Will
AU - Wroe, Nicholas
AU - Jayan, Jithu
AU - Ward, Rachel
AU - Mallikarjuna, Bijay
AU - Joglekar, Anupama
AU - Munro, Mike
AU - Akram, Aaqid
AU - McCambridge, Colette
AU - Rodrigo, Udya
AU - Buddhika, Rasika
AU - Corp, Aaron
AU - Al-Raweshidy, Yasser
AU - McDaniel McDaniel, Andre
AU - Lim, Mun Kiong
AU - Sokhi, Jagdish
AU - Bailey, Emily
AU - Pobjoy, Jonathan
AU - Foster, Conrad
AU - Minskip, Natalie
AU - Campbell, Karen
AU - Woltynski, Charlotte
AU - Looms, Jonathan
AU - Donnelly, Kieran
AU - Pierrepont, Zachary
AU - Wadrup, Kayleigh
AU - Qamar, Adeel
AU - Sreenivasan, Ramabhadran Kadayam
AU - Mahr, Melina
AU - Caetano, Eduardo
AU - Pocock, Laura
AU - Evans, Carl
AU - Highgate, Judith
AU - Sahota, Sanjeev
AU - Sekhorn, Gagandeep
AU - Anderson, Phil
AU - Whitmore, David
AU - WhiLle, Liberty
AU - Colwell, Catriona
AU - Noor, Muhammad
AU - Chapman, Tyler
AU - Diamond, Paul
AU - Doherty, Sarah
AU - Law, Kristopher
AU - Twohig, Callum
AU - Burke, Katie
AU - Sumner, Dan
AU - Henderson, Jamie
AU - Cox, Emma
AU - Sayes, Kamal
AU - Screech, Francis
AU - Trussell, Tariq
AU - Stubbs, Abigail
AU - Kirby, Robert
AU - Banerjee, Shabnam
AU - Seden, Briony
AU - Davison, Callum
AU - Mackenzie, Cameron
AU - Hegarty, Matt
AU - Patel, Shreya
AU - Aye, Cho Thazin
AU - Marriott, Arran
AU - Sylvester, James
AU - Nicholls, Tom
AU - Yeoman, Amy
AU - Medhurst, Laura
AU - Tin, Kim
AU - Adnan, Sairah
AU - Jordan, Catherine
AU - Masaud, Mariam
AU - Perry, Chris
AU - Elkasass, Miriam
AU - Knowles, Thomas
AU - O’Keeffe, Oliver
AU - Samuels, Theophilus
AU - Ashley-Fenn, William
AU - Achiam, Lauren
AU - Chebbout, Ryad
AU - Edmond, Ian
AU - Hagarty, Julia
AU - Mehta, Arnav
AU - Marshall, Susanne
AU - Lewis, Rachal
AU - Ellahi, Awaiss
AU - Maskell, Nicholas
AU - Kajtor, Istvan
AU - Reid, Emily
AU - Marasinska, Katarzyna
AU - Gorton, Matthew
AU - Shehata, Mohamed
AU - Mills, Rachel
AU - Maughan, Charlotte
AU - Beeby, Tom
AU - Scott, Sara
AU - Liu, Felix
AU - Rossiter, Adam
AU - Cooper, Russell
AU - Austen, Luke
AU - Cowan, Richard
AU - Walls, Luke
AU - Burgess, David
AU - Ralston, Maximilian
AU - Rees, Stephanie
AU - Pugh, Richard
AU - Jones-Fullerton, Caitlin
AU - Coultate, Morwenna
AU - Katuri, Sanjana
AU - Marshal-Nichols, Hannah
AU - Brown, Richard
AU - Havalda, Peter
AU - Bowen, James
AU - Kodliwadmath, Anand
AU - Dharmarathna, Konara
AU - Biligiri, Shashidhar
AU - Bull, Thomas
AU - Hanna-Jumma, Sameer
AU - Salem, Karim
AU - Rambabu, Leeka
AU - Yap, Suhao
AU - Badawy, Mohammed
AU - Mounstephen, Peter
AU - Dickinson, Charlotte
AU - Reevell, Thomas
AU - McCall, Philip
AU - Flood, Clare
AU - McAreavey, Rhiannon
AU - Balavage, Mark
AU - Ellis, Richard
AU - Beckett, Samuel
AU - Lim, Yin Yin
AU - Meiarasu, Radharetnasivan
AU - Eraifej, Thomas
AU - Chan, Hei Man Priscilla
AU - Mughal, Najam Shahzad
AU - O’SULLIVAN, Laura
AU - Murphy, Stephen
AU - Jackson, Alexandra
AU - Verma, Aditi
AU - Gildea, John Conor
AU - Lees, Nicholas
AU - Assaf, Ramey
AU - Kathar, Sushil
AU - Wirth, Rodrigo
AU - Gu, Wenjia
AU - Rayaroth, Habeeb
AU - Batista, Andreia
AU - Huntley, Martin
AU - Davies, Holly
AU - Grace, Emma
PY - 2024/10
Y1 - 2024/10
N2 - Purpose: Echocardiography is recommended as a first-line tool in the assessment of patients with shock. The current provision of echocardiography in critical care is poorly defined. The aims of this work were to evaluate the utilisation of echocardiography in patients presenting to critical care with shock, its impact on decision making, and adherence to governance guidelines. Methods: We conducted a prospective, multi-centre, observational study in 178 critical care units across the United Kingdom (UK) and Crown Dependencies, led by the UK’s Trainee Research in Intensive Care Network. Consecutive adult patients (≥ 18 years) admitted with shock were followed up for 72 h to ascertain whether they received an echocardiogram, the nature of any scan performed, and its effect on critical treatment decision making. Results: 1015 patients with shock were included. An echocardiogram was performed on 545 (54%) patients within 72 h and 436 (43%) within 24 h of admission. Most scans were performed by the critical care team (n = 314, 58%). Echocardiography was reported to either reduce diagnostic uncertainty or change management in 291 (54%) cases. Patients with obstructive or cardiogenic shock had their management altered numerically more often by echocardiography (n = 15 [75%] and n = 100 [58%] respectively). Twenty-five percent of echocardiograms performed adhered to current national governance and image storage guidance. Conclusion: Use of echocardiography in the assessment of patients with shock remains heterogenous. When echocardiography is used, it improves diagnostic certainty or changes management in most patients. Future research should explore barriers to increasing use of echocardiography in assessing patients presenting with shock.
AB - Purpose: Echocardiography is recommended as a first-line tool in the assessment of patients with shock. The current provision of echocardiography in critical care is poorly defined. The aims of this work were to evaluate the utilisation of echocardiography in patients presenting to critical care with shock, its impact on decision making, and adherence to governance guidelines. Methods: We conducted a prospective, multi-centre, observational study in 178 critical care units across the United Kingdom (UK) and Crown Dependencies, led by the UK’s Trainee Research in Intensive Care Network. Consecutive adult patients (≥ 18 years) admitted with shock were followed up for 72 h to ascertain whether they received an echocardiogram, the nature of any scan performed, and its effect on critical treatment decision making. Results: 1015 patients with shock were included. An echocardiogram was performed on 545 (54%) patients within 72 h and 436 (43%) within 24 h of admission. Most scans were performed by the critical care team (n = 314, 58%). Echocardiography was reported to either reduce diagnostic uncertainty or change management in 291 (54%) cases. Patients with obstructive or cardiogenic shock had their management altered numerically more often by echocardiography (n = 15 [75%] and n = 100 [58%] respectively). Twenty-five percent of echocardiograms performed adhered to current national governance and image storage guidance. Conclusion: Use of echocardiography in the assessment of patients with shock remains heterogenous. When echocardiography is used, it improves diagnostic certainty or changes management in most patients. Future research should explore barriers to increasing use of echocardiography in assessing patients presenting with shock.
KW - Critical care
KW - Echocardiography
KW - Intensive care
KW - Shock
KW - Ultrasound
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85202505882&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00134-024-07590-6
DO - 10.1007/s00134-024-07590-6
M3 - Article
C2 - 39158704
AN - SCOPUS:85202505882
SN - 0342-4642
VL - 50
SP - 1668
EP - 1680
JO - Intensive Care Medicine
JF - Intensive Care Medicine
IS - 10
ER -