Assessment of Point of Care Lung Ultrasound in the Ambulatory Heart Failure Setting
David Golombeck, Radiah Khandokar, Joanna Fishbein, Allison Provenzale, Melodie Lin, Marsha McGee, Dora Rossi, Simon Maybaum

TL;DR
This study shows that brief training allows non-experts to perform high-quality lung ultrasounds for heart failure patients, with automated tools improving consistency and detecting early congestion.
Contribution
Demonstrates the feasibility of automated B-line counting in improving novice provider performance and detecting mild congestion in ambulatory heart failure.
Findings
Novice providers achieved 88% good-quality lung ultrasounds after 2 hours of training.
Automated B-line counting showed better consistency than manual counts by experts.
Lung ultrasound detected mild volume overload not captured by clinical exams.
Abstract
Limited studies have evaluated lung ultrasound (LUS) in ambulatory heart failure (HF). A six‐zone LUS assesses B‐lines, a marker of congestion. The Butterfly IQ+ probe features an automated B‐line counter (ABLC), eliminating manual counting. We evaluated LUS quality by novice HF providers after training, compared expert manual counts to ABLC, and explored associations between LUS and clinical HF metrics. Three novice providers underwent 2 h of didactics and 30 proctored exams. Image quality was independently reviewed by two LUS experts. B‐lines were counted manually by experts and ABLC. We assessed associations between LUS and four clinical metrics: provider‐assessed volume status, > 30% NT‐proBNP increase, > 5 lb weight gain, and PAD above goal (CardioMEMS). Seventy‐five subjects were enrolled. Overall, LUS quality was excellent, with 88% good quality. Surprisingly, agreement between…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUltrasound in Clinical Applications · Ultrasound and Hyperthermia Applications · Cardiac Arrest and Resuscitation
