Diagnostic Accuracy and Clinical Impact of Handheld Point-of-Care Ultrasound in Pediatric Odontogenic Infections: A Prospective Cohort Study
Hanna Frid, Amir Bilder, Ahmad Hija, Omri Emodi

TL;DR
This study shows that handheld ultrasound can help non-specialists accurately diagnose dental infections in children, reducing hospital admissions and ED visits.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the clinical utility of handheld POCUS for diagnosing pediatric odontogenic infections when used by non-specialists.
Findings
Handheld POCUS had 73% accuracy in distinguishing abscess from cellulitis in pediatric dental infections.
Hospital admission rates dropped significantly after POCUS implementation.
POCUS use was associated with reduced ED burden and healthcare costs.
Abstract
Background: Pediatric odontogenic infections pose significant diagnostic challenges, particularly in distinguishing between cellulitis and abscess. Accurate differentiation is crucial for guiding appropriate management—antibiotics alone for cellulitis versus surgical incision and drainage (I&D) for an abscess—but can be difficult without specialized expertise or advanced imaging. Objective: We aimed to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of handheld point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS; Philips Lumify), utilized by non-specialist clinicians, in differentiating cellulitis from abscess in pediatric odontogenic infections. A secondary objective was to assess its impact on reducing hospital admissions and emergency department (ED) burden. Methods: This prospective cohort study involved 111 pediatric patients (aged 1–17 years) presenting with maxillofacial odontogenic infections to a tertiary care…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUltrasound in Clinical Applications · Otolaryngology and Infectious Diseases · Pleural and Pulmonary Diseases
