June 2021, Video 3: The Speed of Sound: Pneumothorax: Ultrasound Makes the Diagnosis
his video shows a lung point, the transition between normal lung sliding and pneumothorax. Christine Butts, MD, says note the sliding motion on the left of the image and the lack of sliding on the right. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - June 1, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

June 2021, Video 2: The Speed of Sound: Pneumothorax: Ultrasound Makes the Diagnosis
This video shows a lack of sliding, says Christine Butts, MD. Note also the absence of comet tails because the visceral pleura is not visible here. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - June 1, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

June 2021, Video 1: The Speed of Sound: Pneumothorax: Ultrasound Makes the Diagnosis
This video demonstrates the “slide sign” in which the visceral and parietal pleural layers slide past each other. Christine Butts, MD, says also note the comet tails, the short vertical lines emanating from the pleural layers that appear and disappear with movement. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - June 1, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

June 2021, Video 3: The Speed of Sound: Pneumothorax: Ultrasound Makes the Diagnosis
his video shows a lung point, the transition between normal lung sliding and pneumothorax. Christine Butts, MD, says note the sliding motion on the left of the image and the lack of sliding on the right. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - June 1, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

June 2021, Video 2: The Speed of Sound: Pneumothorax: Ultrasound Makes the Diagnosis
This video shows a lack of sliding, says Christine Butts, MD. Note also the absence of comet tails because the visceral pleura is not visible here. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - June 1, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

June 2021, Video 1: The Speed of Sound: Pneumothorax: Ultrasound Makes the Diagnosis
This video demonstrates the “slide sign” in which the visceral and parietal pleural layers slide past each other. Christine Butts, MD, says also note the comet tails, the short vertical lines emanating from the pleural layers that appear and disappear with movement. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - June 1, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

February 2021: Speed of Sound: Rethink Probe Position to Find Occult Pneumothoraces-Video 3 of 3
Christine Butts, MD, says the finding of a lung point, or the point at which the parietal and visceral pleural layers come back together (and the pneumothorax stops), can be demonstrated to confirm further that the lack of sliding is caused by a pneumothorax, not another process. Note the sliding on the left side of the image, which disappears on the right. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - January 29, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

February 2021: Speed of Sound: Rethink Probe Position to Find Occult Pneumothoraces-Video 2 of 3
Christine Butts, MD, says when air is present between the visceral and parietal pleura, as in a pneumothorax, the visceral pleura is obscured by the air, and only the static, nonsliding parietal pleura is seen. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - January 29, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

February 2021: Speed of Sound: Rethink Probe Position to Find Occult Pneumothoraces-Video 1 of 3
Christine Butts, MD, says a high-frequency transducer is typically used to evaluate the pleura when looking for a pneumothorax. When the visceral and parietal pleura are in contact, they can be seen to slide against each other as the patient breathes in and out, as seen in this video showing lung sliding in the absence of a pneumothorax. Note the rib, with shadowing on the left of the image. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - January 29, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

February 2021: Speed of Sound: Rethink Probe Position to Find Occult Pneumothoraces-Video 3 of 3
Christine Butts, MD, says the finding of a lung point, or the point at which the parietal and visceral pleural layers come back together (and the pneumothorax stops), can be demonstrated to confirm further that the lack of sliding is caused by a pneumothorax, not another process. Note the sliding on the left side of the image, which disappears on the right. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - January 29, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

February 2021: Speed of Sound: Rethink Probe Position to Find Occult Pneumothoraces-Video 2 of 3
Christine Butts, MD, says when air is present between the visceral and parietal pleura, as in a pneumothorax, the visceral pleura is obscured by the air, and only the static, nonsliding parietal pleura is seen. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - January 29, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

February 2021: Speed of Sound: Rethink Probe Position to Find Occult Pneumothoraces-Video 1 of 3
Christine Butts, MD, says a high-frequency transducer is typically used to evaluate the pleura when looking for a pneumothorax. When the visceral and parietal pleura are in contact, they can be seen to slide against each other as the patient breathes in and out, as seen in this video showing lung sliding in the absence of a pneumothorax. Note the rib, with shadowing on the left of the image. Read more in her column at http://bit.ly/SpeedSound. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - January 29, 2021 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video

May 2019: Ultrasound for Pneumothorax
Martha Roberts, ACNP, CEN, and James R. Roberts, MD, say that bedside ultrasound has potential to be the new gold standard for pneumothorax. Learn more in their video at http://bit.ly/EMN-ProceduralPause. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - April 27, 2019 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video