Applied Sciences (Feb 2020)

Artifactual Lung Ultrasonography: It Is a Matter of Traps, Order, and Disorder

  • Gino Soldati,
  • Andrea Smargiassi,
  • Libertario Demi,
  • Riccardo Inchingolo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app10051570
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
p. 1570

Abstract

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When inspecting the lung with standard ultrasound B-mode imaging, numerous artifacts can be visualized. These artifacts are useful to recognize and evaluate several pathological conditions in Emergency and Intensive Care Medicine. More recently, the interest of the Pulmonologists has turned to the echographic study of the interstitial pathology of the lung. In fact, all lung pathologies which increase the density of the tissue, and do not consolidate the organ, are characterized by the presence of ultrasound artifacts. Many studies of the past have only assessed the number of vertical artifacts (generally known as B-Lines) as a sign of disease severity. However, recent observations suggest that the appearance of the individual artifacts, their variability, and their internal structure, may play a role for a non-invasive characterization of the surface of the lungs, directing the diagnoses and identifying groups of diseases. In this review, we discuss the meaning of lung ultrasound artifacts, and introduce hypothesis on the correlation between their presence and the structural variation of the sub-pleural tissue in light of current knowledge of the acoustic properties of the pleural plane.

Keywords