To assess the respective diagnostic accuracy of transthoracic echocardiography (TTE)
and transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) and their therapeutic implications in mechanically
ventilated patients, in the intensive care unit (ICU).
A prospective study.
Intensive care units of two tertiary referral teaching hospitals.
One hundred eleven ICU patients (81 men and 30 women; mean age 57 +/- 16 years). Fifty-seven
percent were hospitalized for medical illnesses, 16.5 percent after thoracic surgery,
10.5 percent after other surgery, and 16.0 percent for multiple trauma. Their Simplified
Acute Physiologic Score was 16 +/- 5.
The echocardiograms were performed in order to solve well-defined clinical problems.
TTE was the first step of the procedure and TEE was performed only when (1) TTE did
not solve the clinical problems, and (2) TTE yielded unsuspected findings requiring
TEE. During each echocardiographic study, the following were noted: ventilatory mode,
clinical problems, imaging quality, results, consequence on acute care, duration of
the procedure, and potential complications of TEE. Diagnostic accuracy was defined
as the proportion of solved problems, and therapeutic impact was defined as changes
on acute care that resulted directly from the procedure.
One hundred twenty-eight consecutive TTE and 96 TEE were performed. TTE solved 60
of 158 clinical problems (38 percent), whether positive end-expiratory pressure (>
4 cm H2O) was present or not (28 of 74 vs 32 of 84: p > 0.50). TTE allowed evaluation
of left ventricular function in 77 percent of cases and pericardial effusion in every
case, but it did not solve most of the other clinical problems. Indeed, the diagnostic
accuracy of TEE was markedly superior (95/98 vs 60/158: p < 0.001), but TEE required
a physician's presence longer (43 +/- 17 min vs 27 +/- 12 min: p < 0.001). When TTE
and TEE were scheduled (n = 96), TEE yielded an additional diagnosis or excluded with
more certitude a suspected diagnosis, except in two cases. TEE had a therapeutic impact
more frequently than TTE (35/96 vs 20/128: p < 0.001). Cardiovascular surgery was
prompted by echocardiographic findings in ten patients. TEE was well tolerated in
all patients; there were no complications.
TEE is a valuable well-tolerated imaging technique in mechanically ventilated patients.
For the assessment of left ventricular systolic function and pericardial effusion;
however, TTE continues to be an excellent diagnostic tool, even when positive end-expiratory
pressure is present. Both TTE and TEE have a therapeutic impact in approximately 25
percent of cases.