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Background: Ultrasound can overcome barriers to visualizing the internal jugular vein, allowing hepato-jugular reflux and jugular venous pressure measurement. We aimed to determine operating characteristics of the ultrasound hepato-jugular reflux and ultrasound jugular venous pressure predicting right atrial and pulmonary capillary occlusion pressures.
Methods: In a prospective observational cohort at three US academic hospitals the hepato-jugular reflux and jugular venous pressure were measured with ultrasound before right heart catheterization. Receiver operating curves, likelihood ratios, and regression models were utilized to compare the ultrasound hepato-jugular reflux and ultrasound jugular venous pressure to the right atrial and pulmonary capillary occlusion pressures.
Results: In 99 adults undergoing right heart catheterization, an ultrasound hepato-jugular reflux had a negative likelihood ratio of 0.4 if 0 cm and a positive likelihood ratio of 4.3 if ≥ 1.5 cm for predicting a pulmonary capillary occlusion pressure ≥ 15 mmHg. Regression modeling predicting pulmonary capillary occlusion pressure was not only improved by including the ultrasound hepato-jugular reflux (P < .001), it was the more impactful predictor compared with the ultrasound jugular venous pressure (adjusted odds ratio 2.6 vs 1.2). The ultrasound hepato-jugular reflux showed substantial agreement (kappa 0.76; 95% confidence interval, 0.30-1.21), with poor agreement for the ultrasound jugular venous pressure (kappa 0.11; 95% confidence interval, -0.37-0.58).
Conclusion: In patients undergoing right heart catheterization, the ultrasound hepato-jugular reflux is reproducible, has modest impact on the probability of a normal pulmonary capillary occlusion pressure when 0 cm, and more substantial impact on the probability of an elevated pulmonary capillary occlusion pressure when ≥ 1.5 cm.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amjmed.2024.02.019 | DOI Listing |
Am J Med
June 2024
Department of Medicine, MedStar Union Memorial Hospital, Baltimore, Md.
Background: Ultrasound can overcome barriers to visualizing the internal jugular vein, allowing hepato-jugular reflux and jugular venous pressure measurement. We aimed to determine operating characteristics of the ultrasound hepato-jugular reflux and ultrasound jugular venous pressure predicting right atrial and pulmonary capillary occlusion pressures.
Methods: In a prospective observational cohort at three US academic hospitals the hepato-jugular reflux and jugular venous pressure were measured with ultrasound before right heart catheterization.
Medicine (Baltimore)
July 2018
University of Medicine and Pharmacy Grigore T. Popa Iasi Sf Maria Emergency Hospital for Children Iasi, Department of Pediatric Nephrology, Romania.
Rationale: Though to be rare, calcific uremic arteriolophathy (CUA) is an ectopic calcification entity causing pain and disabilities in patients with chronic renal insufficiency, thus increasing the morbidity and mortality.
Patient Concern: We report a case of four years old boy admitted with acute respiratory failure. Physical examination revealed: irritability, purple subcutaneous hard nodules, tachypnea, dry spasmodic cough, respiratory rate 45/min, heart rate 110/min, blood pressure 100/60 mmHg, with normal heart sounds, no murmurs, hepatomegaly with hepato-jugular reflux.
Schweiz Med Wochenschr
December 1983
The sensitivity and specificity of three clinical signs used for the diagnosis of tricuspid regurgitation (hepato-jugular reflux, congestion of the neck veins, inspiratory dilatation of the neck veins) were evaluated in 27 patients by contrast echocardiography. Tricuspid regurgitation was diagnosed when regurgitation of microbubbles into the inferior vena cava occurred at the time of the v-wave of the atrial pressure pulse. Nine of the 27 patients had tricuspid regurgitation (group I) and 18 patients (group II) did not.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn investigation was carried out of the diagnostic value of hepato-jugular reflux in patients with heart failure. The effect of abdominal compression on superior vena cava pressure was assessed in patients with and without heart failure. In four of the six patients without congestive cardiac failure, during compression, whether applied in the right hypochondrium or left iliac fossa, there was a significant rise in vena cava pressure.
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