LUS Basics - Echoes & Airwaves
- Echoes (Tissue Appearance):
- Anechoic (Black): Simple fluid (e.g., pleural effusion).
- Hypoechoic (Grey): Consolidated lung, complex fluid.
- Hyperechoic (White): Pleura, bone, air artifacts (A/B-lines).
- Key Structures & Artifacts:
- Pleural Line: Bright, hyperechoic line; visceral-parietal pleural interface.
- Lung Sliding: Shimmering/gliding movement at the pleural line. Absence suggests pneumothorax (or adhesions, mainstem intubation, apnea).
- A-lines: Horizontal, repetitive, hyperechoic artifacts arising from pleural line; indicate normal aerated lung.
- B-lines: Vertical, hyperechoic, laser-like artifacts from pleural line to screen edge; erase A-lines, move with lung sliding. Indicate interstitial syndrome (e.g., edema, inflammation, fibrosis).
- Pathological: ≥3 B-lines in one intercostal space.
⭐ Diffuse, bilateral B-lines (often called "lung rockets") are a key sign of cardiogenic pulmonary edema.

Normal Lungscape - Sliding & Shining
- Pleural Line ("Shining"): Bright, hyperechoic, smooth, horizontal line.
- Represents visceral-parietal pleural interface.
- "Bat Sign": Key landmark; two ribs (wings) sandwiching pleural line (body).
- Lung Sliding: Dynamic "to-and-fro" shimmering or twinkling at the pleural line.
- Synchronous with respiration.
- Indicates visceral pleura sliding against parietal pleura.
- A-lines: Horizontal, hyperechoic reverberation artifacts below pleural line.
- Equidistant, parallel to pleural line.
- Signify air; normal in aerated lung with sliding.
- M-mode: "Seashore Sign" confirms normal sliding.
- Chest wall: Static lines ("waves").
- Lung: Granular pattern ("sandy beach") below pleural line.

⭐ The presence of lung sliding effectively rules out pneumothorax at the specific intercostal space being examined with high negative predictive value.
Pathology Patterns - Spotting Trouble

- Pneumothorax (PTX):
- Key signs: Absent lung sliding, absent B-lines, exclusive A-lines.
- M-mode: "Stratosphere"/"Barcode" sign (vs. "Seashore").
⭐ The Lung Point sign (sliding/non-sliding interface) is pathognomonic, 100% specific for pneumothorax.
- Pleural Effusion:
- Anechoic/hypoechoic space between pleurae.
- Signs: "Quad sign", "Sinusoid sign" (inspiratory lung movement).
- "Jellyfish sign": Atelectatic lung floating.
- Pulmonary Edema (Interstitial Syndrome):
- Multiple (≥3), bilateral, diffuse B-lines ("lung rockets").
- Erase A-lines, move with sliding.
- Thickened, irregular pleural line.
- Consolidation:
- Subpleural, tissue-like pattern ("hepatization").
- "Shred"/"Fractal sign" (irregular border).
- Dynamic air bronchograms (pneumonia-specific).
- Atelectasis:
- Similar to consolidation; loss of aeration.
- Static/absent air bronchograms.
- Volume loss signs (e.g., raised hemidiaphragm).
PeriOp POCUS Plays - Guiding Care
- Preoperative Assessment:
- Identify occult pathology: pleural effusions, B-lines (interstitial syndrome), consolidations.
- Risk stratify for Postoperative Pulmonary Complications (PPCs); informs anesthetic plan.
- Intraoperative Guidance:
- Fluid management: Titrate fluids by monitoring B-lines (target <3 per zone) to prevent overload.
- Diagnose acute respiratory distress:
- Pneumothorax: Absent lung sliding, "lung point" sign (pathognomonic).
- Atelectasis: "Lung pulse" with absent sliding, tissue-like pattern.
- Pulmonary edema: Diffuse, bilateral B-lines (≥3 per zone).
- Endobronchial intubation: Unilateral absent sliding.
- Confirm ETT placement: Bilateral lung sliding, diaphragmatic movement.
- Postoperative Care:
- Early detection & monitoring of PPCs: atelectasis, pneumonia, effusions.
- Guide ventilator weaning: Assess lung aeration (LUS score), predict extubation success.
- 📌 BLUE protocol for acute dyspnea.
⭐ Lung ultrasound (LUS) rapidly diagnoses causes of perioperative respiratory failure, often outperforming CXR and guiding immediate intervention.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- A-lines: Horizontal artifacts; normal lung or pneumothorax if no lung sliding.
- B-lines (≥3 per zone): Vertical artifacts; indicate pulmonary edema or interstitial syndromes.
- Lung sliding absence: Key sign of pneumothorax ("stratosphere sign" on M-mode).
- Lung point: Highly specific for pneumothorax; transition from sliding to no sliding.
- Pleural effusion: Anechoic fluid in dependent areas; "sinusoid sign" may be present.
- Consolidation: Tissue-like pattern ("hepatization") with characteristic air bronchograms.
- BLUE protocol: Systematically diagnoses causes of acute respiratory failure using LUS (Lung Ultrasound).
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