Case 19 - Shock or Not, That is the Question...

Author: Dr Nick Mani Reviewer: Dr Nish Cherian

A 60-year old male presents with palpitations and lightheadedness. ECG shows a narrow complex tachycardia associated with haemodynamic instability.

DC cardioversion is about to be performed, but upon urgent Consultant review other cause of shock is considered.

You elect to perform a shock POCUS protocol to enhance the clinical assessmen: -

Clips Collection- Relevant clips of the Focused POCUS enhanced clinical assessment*

Panel A- Cardiac (PLAX/PSAX/A4C/SX/SC/IVC & modified PSAX **)

Panel B- Abdominal Aorta (short & long views)

Panel C- Renal (long views)/Bladder (short views)

* Lungs, FAFF, Hepato-Biliary, Appendix, and Proximal Leg Deep Veins were all performed with low suspicion of pathology (Images not shown) as an extended shock protocol

** PLAX- Parasternal Long Axis, PSAX- Parastenral Short Axis, A4C- Apical 4 Chamber, SX/SC- Sub-Xiphoid/Costal

 
 

Images Collection- CT Abdomen/Pelvis with contrast demonstrating left obstructing ureteric calculus and multiple bladder stones, and AAA measuring 4.7cm

 

Case Resolution

The patient was admitted to the ICU, had an urgent nephrostomy which drained large amount of pus from the left kidney. POCUS-enhanced clinical assessment significantly improved the quality and efficiency of patient care.

Take home message

Cause of shock could be quickly evaluated by a POCUS protocol as a extension of clinical assessment.

Appendix

The Shock Protocol

The black squares are the probe placement with the dotted lines with arrow(s) as sweeping direction. The smaller sized black square- phased array, medium- linear, large- curvilinear

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Case 20 - Torn Apart...

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Case 18 - No Time For Hips to Lie