Emergency Physicians' Point of Care Ultrasonography (POCUS) Competency Assessment for the Diagnosis of Acute Appendicitis in Pediatric Cases
Citation
Atalar H, Keşaplı M, Karakoyun ÖF, Karaca A. Emergency Physicians’ Point of Care Ultrasonography (POCUS) Competency Assessment for the Diagnosis of Acute Appendicitis in Pediatric Cases. Eurasian J Emerg Med. 2022;21(2):146-51.Abstract
Aim: To evaluate the accuracy of emergency physicians performed point-of-care ultrasonography (EP-POCUS) in diagnosing acute appendicitis (AA) in the pediatric age group who had abdominal pain and compare sonographic findings with those of radiologists.
Materials and Methods: One hundred twenty-three children who had abdominal pain were included in the study. EP-POCUS and radiology department ultrasonography (RADUS) performed on each case. Sonographic findings [non-compressible bowel loops, target sign, edema in the surrounding tissue, appendix diameter, peri-appendiceal abscess, appendicitis positivity (a non-compressible and non-peristaltic blind ending tubular structure >6 mm) and presence of mesenteric lymphadenitis] of the EP-POCUS and RADUS were recorded seperately and compared to evaluate accuracy of the EP-POCUS and RADUS. Definitive diagnoses were determined by pathological evaluation of appendectomy specimens.
Results: Thirty-six (29.2%) patients were diagnosed AA and hospitalized by the surgeon, 30 (24.3%) of which were confirmed pathologically. According to pathological diagnose, the EP-POCUS's sensitivity was 73.3%, specificity was 89.2%, the RADUS's sensitivity was 76.7%, the specificity was 96.8% and significantly consistent with in diagnosing AA (Kappa coefficient: 0.64, p<0.005). EP-POCUS accuracy in AA diagnosis did not differ between age groups.
Conclusion: EP-POCUS on pediatric patients acts as an auxiliary and useful approach in AA diagnosis. Training and experience may increase the accuracy rates.