Abstract :
Overcrowding during pandemics, such as COVID19 necessitates the separation of respiratory
patients in different locations with special
protective measures. Thus, we allocated space to
such a purpose and named it respiratory
emergency” in our emergency department and
started to triage the patients coming in with
respiratory tract signs and symptoms apart from
others. However, the most critical point for the
triage of respiratory patients is differentiation
between COVID-19 and non COVID-19 suspicious
patients as well as decision-making in terms of selfquarantine and outpatient treatment or admission.
Considering the lack of test kits and more
importantly, the uncertainty revolving around the
performance and efficacy of tests, we used
computed tomography (CT) scan as a triage tool,
yet our machines cannot scan all these patients
because we had up to more than eight hundred
patients per day. Meanwhile three of us -
emergency attending physicians - were under the
impression that lung ultrasound may help.
Therefore, we started to use lung ultrasound in a
limited fashion. Fortunately, typical cases had
peripheral and sub-pleural lesions that could be
seen by ultrasound. Parallel to these efforts, limited
reports were published about the use of ultrasound
for COVID-19 in other regions. Evidently, a screen test is expected to have high
sensitivity rather than specificity and the
ultrasound provides this opportunity. Also we
know the findings are not specific and for example
we had observed these patterns in other viral
epidemics, such as severe acute respiratory
syndrome (SARS) or middle East Respiratory
Syndrome (MERS). To date, several triage systems
have been developed. The Italian version used by
Dr. Volpicelli first and developed further by others,
like that of Liam Devonport can exemplify this case
(1, 2)
.
Furthermore, a simple triage system has been
developed by Dr. Mike Stone, based on the
ultrasound of lungs plus oxygen need (3). This
flowchart summarizes Dr. Stone’s idea with three elements for decision-making consisting of: a) O2
requirement, b) B lines and c) consolidation. Three
categories are enrolled. All patients with cough,
fever and dyspnea or patients coming in from highrisk areas or those having close contact with covid19 patients are enrolled. After bedsides sampling
for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test, the O2
saturation is measured and lung ultrasound is also
done and then according to the data obtained, four
categories are created as follows:
Inpatients for whom supplementary O2 is not
required. If lung ultrasound shows A profile,
patients can be discharged to home quarantine.
If lung shows profile B, patients should undergo
quarantine plus follow-up. This quarantine can
be at home or institutes considering the facilities
available.
Patients, depending on supplementary oxygen,
should be admitted according to the findings of
lung ultrasound. If they have only B lines, they
are admitted in the ward but if they have profile
B plus consolidation, we should consider
intensive care unit (ICU) beds for them.
In essence, all these systems use lung ultrasound
for decision-making, which is efficient in a majority
of occasions, yet we have critically ill patients with
dyspnea and decreased O2 saturation without
proportionate changes in lungs even according to
CT scanning. Thus, we could not justify their health
status based on the findings of the imaging of
respiratory system To discover the cause of dyspnea in these patients,
we included heart ultrasound in addition to lung
ultrasound and witnessed a decline in ejection
fraction and global hypokinesia, which can justify
their unsatisfying health status. In the meantime,
several case series about myocarditis in covid-19
reveal the prevalence of myocarditis between 7%
and 20% among patients (4)
. Increased troponin
and change of the electrocardiogram (ECG)in these
patients confirm myocarditis and help us to
calibrate our care for the heart complaints sooner
and more effectively. This approach might provide
better prognosis for these patients.
Keywords :
Care Ultrasound , Triage Tool , Novel Coronavirus , COVID-19 , necessitates