Lung and Inferior Vena Cava Point-of-Care Ultrasonography, NT-Pro-BNP, and Discharge Body Weight as Predictors of Rehospitalization in Acute Heart Failure
Danilo Martins, Edson Luiz Fávero Junior, Thiago Dias Baumgratz, Cintia Mitsue Pereira Suzuki, Sean Hideo Shirata Lanças, Diego Aparecido Rios Queiroz, Carolina Rorigues Tonon, Taline Lazzarin, Bertha Furlan Polegato, Paula Schmidt Azevedo, Marina Politi Okoshi

TL;DR
This study finds that lung ultrasound B-line scores at discharge can predict rehospitalization in acute heart failure patients.
Contribution
The study identifies B-line scores from lung ultrasound as a novel predictor of rehospitalization in acute heart failure.
Findings
Patients with B-line scores >3 had a 60% readmission rate versus 21% in others.
Inferior vena cava collapsibility index was lower in readmitted patients but not statistically significant in multivariate analysis.
Abstract
Background: Patients with acute heart failure exhibit high rates of early rehospitalization accompanied by significant mortality. Therefore, identifying high-risk patients who are prone to disease exacerbation may enable early therapeutic interventions for improved disease management. Methods: This single-center, prospective observational study was conducted at a Brazilian hospital. Adult patients hospitalized for acute heart failure were enrolled. On the day of hospital discharge, NT-pro-BNP and body weight data were collected, and bedside lung and inferior vena cava ultrasound examinations were performed. The patients were followed up for up to 30 days after discharge. The primary outcome was rehospitalization for acute heart failure. Results: A total of 100 patients were included in the final analysis, of whom 10% were readmitted within 30 days owing to acute heart failure. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUltrasound in Clinical Applications · Heart Failure Treatment and Management · Hemodynamic Monitoring and Therapy
