Dr. Payel Bose

Point of Care Ultrasound in Critical Care: Thinking Beyond the Chest X-ray By Dr. Payel Bose 

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

In the ICU, clinical examination is often limited and chest X-rays frequently give us more confusion than clarity. This is where Point of Care Ultrasound (POCUS) becomes a true bedside extension of clinical reasoning rather than just another investigation. 
Through a series of ICU-based scenarios, Dr. Payel Bose explains how lung and cardiovascular ultrasound can guide real-time decision-making in critically ill patients. 

Case 1: When Oxygen Requirements Suddenly Rise 

69-year-old man with long-standing hypertension and ischemic cardiomyopathy (EF 35%) is admitted with septic shock secondary to pyelonephritis. Initial management includes broad-spectrum antibiotics, norepinephrine, and nearly three litres of crystalloid resuscitation

Over the next few hours: 

  • His oxygen requirement steadily increases 
  • PF ratio drops from 280 to 160 
  • Auscultation reveals bilateral crackles, though interpretation is difficult 
  • Chest X-ray shows bilateral hazy opacities, reported as nonspecific 

At this point, lung ultrasound is performed. 

Lung Ultrasound Findings 
  • Diffuse bilateral vertical hyperechoic artifacts arising from the pleural line 
  • These artifacts extend to the bottom of the screen and erase A-lines 
  • Lung sliding is preserved 
  • Pleural line is smooth and continuous 
  • No focal consolidations or pleural effusion 

These findings are classic B-lines, seen diffusely across both lungs. 

Final Diagnosis: Pulmonary Edema 

B-lines represent increased fluid in the alveolar–interstitial space. In a patient with septic shock, underlying systolic dysfunction, and aggressive fluid resuscitation, diffuse bilateral B-lines strongly point toward pulmonary edema, most likely cardiogenic or mixed septic-cardiogenic. 

Why Other Options Don’t Fit 

  • Pneumothorax: Lung sliding is present, which essentially rules it out 
  • Lung consolidation: Would show a tissue-like pattern with air bronchograms 
  • ARDS: Typically produces patchy B-lines, pleural irregularity, spared areas, and small subpleural consolidations 

The ultrasound pattern here clearly favours fluid overload rather than inflammatory lung injury

Understanding Lung Artifacts in Simple Terms 

Lung ultrasound relies mainly on artifacts: 

  • A-lines: Horizontal lines → normal aerated lung 
  • B-lines: Vertical lines (“lung rockets”) → interstitial fluid 

Distribution matters: 

  • Diffuse bilateral B-lines: Pulmonary 
  • Focal B-lines: Pneumonia or lung contusion 
  • Widely spaced B-lines: Interstitial fibrosis 
Lung Ultrasound Scoring System 

Lung aeration can be graded: 

  • Score 0: Normal lung sliding, A-lines present 
  • Score 1: Multiple discrete B-lines 
  • Score 2: Coalescent B-lines (white lung) 
  • Score 3: Lung consolidation with tissue-like appearance 
BLUE Protocol: Rapid Bedside Assessment of Hypoxia 

The BLUE protocol helps narrow down causes of acute dyspnea using lung profiles: 

  • A-profile: A-lines with lung sliding → asthma/COPD 
  • B-profile: B-lines with lung sliding → pulmonary edema 
  • C-profile: Consolidation → pneumonia 
  • Absent sliding with A-lines: Pneumothorax 

It does not give a perfect diagnosis but strongly guides clinical direction, especially in emergencies. 

Case 2: Sudden Collapse After Central Line Placement 

56-year-old woman with severe ARDS suddenly develops: 

  • Hypotension 
  • Tachycardia 
  • Increased peak airway pressures 
  • Rapid fall in oxygen saturation 
Lung Ultrasound Findings 
  • Absent lung sliding on the right anterior chest 
  • Prominent A-lines 
  • On lateral scanning, an area where lung sliding alternates with absent sliding 
Key Diagnostic Sign: Lung Point 

The lung point represents the boundary between collapsed lung and pneumothorax. 
It is 100% specific for pneumothorax

Important Clarification 
  • Absent lung sliding alone is not diagnostic 
  • Lung sliding may be absent in apnea, mainstem intubation, pleural adhesions, fibrosis, or low-tidal-volume ARDS 
  • Lung point confirms pneumothorax, though it may be absent in massive pneumothorax 
Case 3: Consolidation or Atelectasis? 

74-year-old ventilated patient with severe pneumonia develops worsening sepsis and a right lower-zone opacity on X-ray. 

Ultrasound Findings 
  • Subpleural hypoechoic region 
  • Tissue-like (liver-like) echo pattern 
  • Dynamic air bronchograms moving with respiration 
  • Minimal pleural effusion 
Diagnosis: Lung Consolidation 

Dynamic air bronchograms indicate patent bronchi with air movement, strongly suggesting inflammatory consolidation (pneumonia)

In contrast: 

  • Atelectasis shows static air bronchograms due to airway obstruction 
Case 4: Hypovolemia and IVC Assessment 

43-year-old man presents with profuse vomiting and diarrhea: 

  • Hypotension 
  • Elevated lactate 
  • No cardiac history 
Ultrasound Findings 
  • IVC diameter ~2 cm with >60% inspiratory collapse 
  • Normal cardiac function 
  • Predominant A-line lung pattern 
Interpretation 

In spontaneously breathing patients, an IVC collapse >50% suggests low right atrial pressure and fluid responsiveness, consistent with hypovolemic shock. 

Case 5: IVC in Mechanically Ventilated Patients 

61-year-old man with septic shock remains hypotensive despite vasopressors. 

Ultrasound Findings 
  • Normal LV systolic function 
  • IVC distensibility index ≈22% 
Key Rule 

In mechanically ventilated patients: 

  • IVC distensibility >18% predicts fluid responsiveness 

This assessment is reliable only when: 

  • Patient is sedated and paralyzed 
  • Sinus rhythm is present 
  • Controlled ventilation with adequate tidal volume 
Key Clinical Takeaways 
  • POCUS is a clinical reasoning tool, not just an imaging modality 
  • Lung ultrasound rapidly differentiates pulmonary edema, pneumothorax, ARDS, and consolidation 
  • IVC interpretation depends heavily on ventilation status 
  • Patterns and clinical context matter more than isolated signs 

When used thoughtfully, POCUS brings clarity to complex ICU decisions—right at the bedside
 
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