Abstract:
Three-Dimensional Ultrasound Device for Rapid Determination
of Bladder Volume
Leonard S. Marks,
Frederick J. Dorey, Maria Luz Macairan, Cindy Park,
and Jean B. DeKernion. "Three-Dimensional Ultrasound
Device for Rapid Determination of Bladder Volume."
Urology 50 (1997) 3: 341-48.
Objectives:
* To assess the accuracy, reliability, and clinical
utility of ultrasound measurement of bladder volume,
using the BladderScan®.
Methods:
A study of 249 adult urology outpatients in a metropolitan
Los Angeles practice was conducted:
* To study accuracy, volume measurements obtained by
ultrasound were compared to catheterized volume. Patients
were catheterized an average of 7.8 ± 4.3 minutes
(range 3 to 33) after scanning.
* To test inter-user reliability, 57 patients were scanned
by a non-urologist MD and a research assistant in succession,
using the same 1995 BladderScan model. The scans were
completed within an average of 9.6 ± 5.2 minutes
(range 4 to 29.5) of one another. All results were recorded
in a blind manner.
Results:
* "The device exhibited a sensitivity of 97%, a
specificity of 91%, and an overall accuracy of 94%.
These results were not affected by age, gender, height,
weight, diagnosis, uterine presence/prostate size, or
user experience."
* "The two observers, one a graduate physician
and the other a college student, achieved essentially
the same volume determinations. . . scan readings were
not a function of the observer or transient changes
in body position."
Conclusions:
* The BladderScan was demonstrated to be "accurate,
reliable, and cost-effective" in an urology outpatient
practice.
* Very little training is required to obtain good-quality
scans with the BladderScan.
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