Pediatrics
Cardiac Standstill
COVID-19 Myocarditis
14 year-old male presents to the ED with chest pain two weeks after being having been diagnosed with COVID-19. Labs were notable for elevated CBC, CRP, ESR, and troponin. POCUS revealed moderately decreased function and LV dilation, consistent with the diagnosis of COVID-19 myocarditis.
Paul Khalil, MD and N. Akwesi Poteh, MD at University of Louisville
@khalil3paul
Pediatric Intussusception
Nursemaid's Elbow
2-year-old female was brought to the ED refusing to use her left arm after her father caught her by the arm to prevent her falling down flight of stairs. POCUS was performed to confirm clinical suspicion of a Nursemaid’s elbow (or radial head subluxation). The left image reveals classic findings of a Nursemaid’s elbow including widening of the synovial fringe and inward extension of the annular ligament. Further, you can appreciate both the supinator muscle, as well as the annular ligament are being pulled into the joint space, a finding known as hook sign. The image on the right is the post-reduction image showing normal alignment and contour of the annular ligament.
Austin Meggitt, MD
Pediatric Emergency Ultrasound Fellow
Denver Health Medical Center @DenverEMed
Knee Effusion
2 year-old male presented with fever, right knee swelling, and elevated CBC, CRP and ESR. POCUS revealed a right knee effusion.
Paul Khalil, MD. Assistant PEM POCUS director at University of Louisville/Norton Children’s
@khalil3paul
Dynamic Air Bronchograms
15 year-old male with cerebral palsy presents to the ED with hypoxia. Physical exam notable for left lung with decreased air movement on auscultation. POCUS demonstrates dynamic air bronchograms consistent with suspected diagnosis of pneumonia.
Paul Khalil, MD. Assistant PEM POCUS director at University of Louisville/Norton Children’s
@khalil3paul
COVID-19 Pneumonia
14 year-old female known to be SARS-CoV-2 positive presented with chest pain and shortness of breath. POCUS revealed findings consistent with COVID pneumonia including thickened pleura and presence of multiple B-lines.
Paul Khalil, MD. Assistant PEM POCUS director at University of Louisville/Norton Children’s
@khalil3paul
Pericardial Effusion
An 8-year-old male presented with a 1 day history of fever and chest pain. Cardiac POCUS shown here revealed a pericardial effusion; he was later started on steroids for the same enabling hospital discharge on hospital day #2.
Amar Singh, MD. University of Louisville
Hepatization of the Lung
A 15-month-old male presented with cough, fever, and tachypnea of 3-days duration. POCUS revealed findings of right lung consolidation, consistent with pneumonia referred to as hepatization of the lung. Seen here territories above and below the diaphragm show ultrasonographic findings resembling liver parenchyma.
Amar Singh, MD. Pediatrics specialist in Louisville, KY
Testicular Torsion
Decreased color doppler is seen in this pediatric patient with testicular torsion.
Dr. Lianne McLean (@doctorlianne) FRCPC of the PEM POCUS Group: Division of Emergency Medicine in the Hospital for Sick Children (@epocus)
Testicular Torsion
Decreased color doppler is seen in this pediatric patient with testicular torsion.
Dr. Lianne McLean (@doctorlianne) FRCPC of the PEM POCUS Group: Division of Emergency Medicine in the Hospital for Sick Children (@epocus)
Pneumonia
3 yo m previously healthy UTD with vaccines. 5 days of cough and fevers. 3 days of abdominal pain, acutely worsening day of presentation with 1 episode of NBNB emesis.
Febrile tachypneic and hypoxic to 91% on RA.
CXR: white out of right lung.
POCUS: large right sided effusion. Hepatization with air bronchograms on the right lateral view.
Dr. Isaac Gordon - Kings County Pediatric Emergency Medicine
Pneumonia
3 yo m previously healthy UTD with vaccines. 5 days of cough and fevers. 3 days of abdominal pain, acutely worsening day of presentation with 1 episode of NBNB emesis.
Febrile tachypneic and hypoxic to 91% on RA.
CXR: white out of right lung.
POCUS: large right sided effusion. Hepatization with air bronchograms on the right lateral view.
Dr. Isaac Gordon - Kings County Pediatric Emergency Medicine
Focal B-lines - Pneumonia
2 years old male with hx of endotracheal intubation secondary to RSV infection presents with 2 days of fever, cough, rhinorrhea and nasal congestion. Denied nausea, emesis, diarrhea, chest pain, syncope, confusion, change in eating patterns and voiding patterns. POCUS demonstrates a focal area of B lines c/w pneumonia (likely viral).
Early PNA B lines: short path reverberation artifacts create by fluid filled alveoli. In the appropriate clinical scenario B lines and pleural consolidation suggest PNA.
Dr. Carolina Camacho Ruiz - Kings County Emergency Medicine
Acute Chest Syndrome
6 y/o sickle cell (HbSS) coughing with left-sided chest pain and 1 day of fever. Lungs without crackles, good air entry bilaterally.
A consolidative process is seen with a hypoechoic region with posterior enhancement greater than 1cm in an area where normal A lines should be present. This is highly suggestive of acute chest syndrome given clinical features.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
Atrial Septal Defect, Positive Bubble Test
WCUME 2017 submission for "Novel Indication"
Bubble test reveals an atrial septal defect seen as bubbles floating from the right side of the heart to the left side. An obvious defect can be seen.
Dr. Mojtaba Chahardoli - Firoozgar Hospital
Ductus Arteriosus (Patent)
WCUME 2017 submission for "Best POCUS"
8 y/o M with undifferentiated dyspnea. POCUS reveals he has open PDA on aorta from suprasternal view.
Dr. Nima Shekar Riz Fomani - Firoozgar General Hospital
Obstructive Hydrocephalus
WCUME 2017 winner for "Novel Indication" - See our blog post for a deep dive on this topic!
7 month old being followed by PCP for increasing head circumference, scheduled for outpatient MRI next week. Mother found patient was becoming somnolent with a full anterior fontanelle and brought the baby to the ER. POCUS performed immediately revealed unequal ventricle size, L>R, at which time neurosurgery was consulted, later CT, MRI performed as inpatient confirming obstructive hydrocephalus.
If you were in a community ER and CT will take a while, should you just POCUS first? How well can this see blood? Masses?
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam - Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia Pediatric, EM Ultrasound
Hydrocephalus - Extra axial Fluid
Extra-axial fluid overlying the superior portion of the frontal lobes in the patient from our blog post on the topic.
7 month old being followed by PCP for increasing head circumference, scheduled for outpatient MRI next week. Mother found patient was becoming somnolent with a full anterior fontanelle and brought the baby to the ER. POCUS performed immediately revealed unequal ventricle size, L>R, at which time neurosurgery was consulted, later CT, MRI performed as inpatient confirming obstructive hydrocephalus.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam - Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia Pediatric, EM Ultrasound
Head Imaging - Coronal Plane
Please see our blog post for further information on this topic.
The coronal plane has the indicator marker to the right and is placed on the anterior fontanelle. The ultrasound beam is swept from the anterior to posterior aspect of the head.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam - Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia Pediatric, EM Ultrasound
Head Imaging - Sagittal View
The sagittal plane has the indicator marker facing the anterior aspect of the face and the ultrasound beam is swept in either the left to right or right to left direction of the patient’s shoulders.
Please see our blog post for further information on this topic.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam - Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia Pediatric, EM Ultrasound
Hydrocephalus
WCUME 2017 submission for "Novel Indication"
Dr. Atim Uya - San Diego, California, USA
Hip Effusion
8-year-old female with fever and upper left thigh pain starting last night. Refusing to bear weight and will not flex hip, discomfort with rotating hip.
POCUS performed, revealed effusion. Still image comparing sides confirms effusion. Etiology of effusion remained uncertain.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
HOCM - Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy
19 y/o came in after a syncopal episode playing video games. Got defibrillated in the field Vfib rate 200s. Bedside echo demonstrated global LVH with septal predominant thickening consistent with HOCM. Father has a history of ICD of “heart condition.”
Dr. Dustin Morrow
HOCM Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
8-year-old with syncope while playing in school. EKG with some non-specific T wave inversions in precodial leads. No murmur, normal heart sounds. POCUS completed for concerning history and EKG changes. Interventricular septal hypertrophy seen on parasternal short and long views (concerning if measurement > 15mm).
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
Knee Effusion - Septic vs. Lyme Arthritis
20 month old with right sided limp for 2 days, no fevers, swelling of knee, able to partially range without discomfort, knee aspirate after POCUS purulent, admitted for wash out. Septic vs Lyme's differential.
Aspirate yielded 923000 WBC from the cell count, but nothing grew from the cultures. Discharged home on 4 weeks of abx for Lyme, as his titers were positive on Elisa and Western blot.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam - Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Radius Fracture (Distal)
7 year old fallen off monkey bars. Tender over right distal radius with mild swelling.
POCUS reveals a discontinuity in the hyperechoic cortex of the child's distal radius with minimal displacement. This is suggestive of a buckle fracture or minimally displaced distal radius fracture.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
Skull Fracture - Pediatrics
10 month old F presents one day after unwitnessed height level fall. Left parietal hematoma without step-off found on physical exam. Otherwise well appearing with normal vital signs. POCUS found a defect in cortex in area of the hematoma. CT head confirmed non-displaced skull fracture of the left parietal bone.
Patient was observed and did not require neurosurgical intervention. More research is needed into the value of POCUS for pediatrics skull fractures and how it can fit into our PECARN decision rules.
Dr Iain Jeffery - Brooklyn Hospital Emergency Medicine
Dr. Tian Liang and Dr Jeffery Rallo - Kings County Department of Pediatrics Emergency Medicine
Lung Hepatization (Pneumonia)
5 year old child with sickle cell disease. Coughing and fever for 3 days. On exam not ill appearing but decreased breath sounds over right lung. POCUS completed to evaluate for pneumonia.
Hepatization of the lung clearly demonstrates consolidative process concerning for pneumonia. The beginning of the image demonstrates hepatization in the lung field. The ultrasonographer then slides the probe inferiorly over normal lung past the diaphragm to the liver, demonstrating how similar lung hepatization can appear compared to the actual liver.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
Infant Skull Fracture
7 m.o fallen from a 4 foot high crib, unwitnessed. On exam small hematoma over right parietal skull, appears tender. POCUS completed to assess for skull fracture.
POCUS reveals a discontinuity in the hyperechoic cortex of the infant skull that is underneath the hematoma. This discontinuity is different from the image of a suture line within the same patient's skull.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
Infant Pneumonia with C-Lines
11 month old unvaccinated infant presenting with cough, fever and tachypnea starting today. Exam with crackles bilaterally in an infant with subcostal retractions and respiratory distress.
Right posterior lung with clear large consolidative process with C lines present.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
Hydrocarbon Ingestion with C-Lines
5 year old male that drank out of container with gasoline and started coughing and was breathing fast. On exam appeared tachypneic, with air entry bilaterally and subcostal retractions.
POCUS revealed bilateral infiltrates, confirmed with CXR. Infiltrate, similar to C lines seen in other consolidative processes, present in patient post hydrocarbon ingestion. This suggests an aspiration pneumonia.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
Ureterocele
WCUME 2017 Submission for "Novel Indication"
Dr. Atim Uya - San Diego, California, USA
Pneumothorax with Lung Point
18 y/o M stabbed in the back presents to the trauma bay with left-sided chest pain and shortness of breath. E-FAST revealed decrease lung slide and a clear lung point.
While decreased lung slide is highly sensitive, it lacks specificity. Lung point indicates the transition point between normal pleura with normal lung sliding (on the left side of the image) and where there is air disrupting the pleural space with decreased lung sliding (on the right side of the image). Lung point is a highly specific finding indicating a pneumothorax.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
Hydronephrosis (Mild)
21 y/o female post-op emergency hysterectomy post uterine rupture with rising creatinine in surgical ICU.
POCUS revealed right-sided mild Grade I hydronephrosis with appreciable dilated major calyces and renal pelvis. Initial concern is for obstructive process or ureter injury.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
Prune Belly Syndrome -Severe Hydronephrosis
10 y/o with Prune Belly Syndrome presenting with suprapubic pain.
Bilateral severe grade IV hydronephrosis. Bear claw appearance of left kidney.
Prune Belly Syndrome is a rare disorder known for lack of abdominal muscles, cryptorchidism, and urinary tract malformations.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
Shoulder Dislocation and Reduction
17 y/o basketball player with acute onset left shoulder pain after throwing a basketball across the court. "Feels like my arm is out of the socket." The patient was relocated with simple traction in less then 2 minutes. No x-rays were required.
The head of humerus is dislocated posterior to the glenoid. After relocation it is flush with glenoid as seen. You can appreciate the musculature and rotator cuff throughout both images.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam, Pediatric EM Fellow - Kings County/SUNY Downstate
Tracheal Stenosis
The patient, presenting with stridor, is supine and the airway is seen from the anterior neck in transverse orientation. As the probe is fanned, the bright white line is seen to widen. This column of air moves with inspiration. At its narrowest it is only a few millimeters wide. Growth along the lateral tracheal walls has caused significant tracheal stenosis. In this case, US was used to determine the width of the tracheal column and determine that passage of an ETT would not be feasible. The patient was taken to the OR for an emergent surgical airway. Use of US to estimate tracheal diameter is a novel application.
Andrew Liteplo MD, RDMS - Massachusetts General Hospital
Chief, Division of Ultrasound in Emergency Medicine
Director, Emergency Ultrasound Fellowship
Supracondylar Fracture
15 year old fell on left elbow, pain and swelling over left elbow on exam.
Raised fat pad in the olecranon fossa of left humerus as compared to right humerus. A raised fat pad is suggestive of an elbow injury, more commonly a supracondylar fracture.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam - Kings County/SUNY Downstate - Pediatric EM Fellow
Supracondylar Fracture - Comparison
15 year old fell on left elbow, pain and swelling over left elbow on exam.
Raised fat pad in the olecranon fossa of left humerus as compared to right humerus. A raised fat pad is suggestive of an elbow injury, more commonly a supracondylar fracture.
Dr. Sathya Subramaniam - Kings County/SUNY Downstate - Pediatric EM Fellow
Testicular Torsion
Teenaged male presented with acute onset unilateral testicular pain and swelling. On exam, the affected testicle was swollen and tender with some color change. POCUS demonstrated normal flow in a normal sized contralateral testicle, and an enlarged affected testicle with no color doppler flow. After manual detorsion, POCUS demonstrates clear restoration of normal blood flow. After urologic consultation, the patient was taken emergently to the OR, where operative findings confirmed testicular torsion, and orchiopexy was performed.
Dr. Michael Duerson, PGY4
Denver Health Residency in Emergency Medicine