Pneumonia (Jun 2024)
Back to the future: the novel art of digital auscultation applied in a prospective observational study of critically ill Covid-19 patients
Abstract
Abstract Background The Covid-19 pandemic has caused immense pressure on Intensive Care Units (ICU). In patients with severe ARDS due to Covid-19, respiratory mechanics are important for determining the severity of lung damage. Lung auscultation could not be used during the pandemic despite its merit. The main objective of this study was to investigate associations between lung auscultatory sound features and lung mechanical properties, length of stay (LOS) and survival, in adults with severe Covid-19 ARDS. Methods Consecutive patients admitted to a large ICU between 2020 and 2021 (n = 173) were included. Digital stethoscopes obtained auscultatory sounds and stored them in an on-line database for replay and further processing using advanced AI techniques. Correlation and regression analysis explored relationships between digital auscultation findings and lung mechanics or the ICU outcome. The resulting annotated lung sounds database is also publicly available as supplementary material. Results The presence of squawks was associated with the ICU LOS, outcome and 90-day mortality. Other features (age, SOFA score & oxygenation index upon admission, minimum crackle entropy) had significant impact on outcome. Additional features affecting the 90-d survival were age and mean crackle entropy. Multivariate logistic regression showed that survival was affected by age, baseline SOFA, baseline oxygenation index and minimum crackle entropy. Conclusions Respiratory mechanics were associated with various adventitious sounds, whereas the lung sound analytics and the presence of certain adventitious sounds correlated with the ICU outcome and the 90-d survival. Spectral features of crackles sounds can serve as prognostic factors for survival, highlighting the importance of digital auscultation.
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