1. Latin American Consensus Statement for the Use of Contrast-Enhanced Transcranial Ultrasound as a Diagnostic Test for Detection of Right-to-Left Shunt
- Author
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Gabriel R. de Freitas, Ana Claudia Celestino Bezerra Leite, Soraia Ramos Cabette Fabio, Octávio Marques Pontes Neto, Corina Puppo, Rodrigo Bazan, Marcos Christiano Lange, Valeria Cristina Scavasine, Jamary Oliveira-Filho, Carla H.C. Moro, Daniela Laranja Gomes, Wagner M Avelar, Alexander Y. Razumovsky, Natan M. Bornstein, Pedro Antônio Pereira de Jesus, Rafael Borsoi, Edson Bor Seng Shu, Silvia Viviana Cocorullo, Alejandro M. Brunser, Massimo Del Sette, Ayrton Roberto Massaro, Viviane Flumignan Zétola, Gabriel Pereira Braga, Maramélia Miranda Alves, Gisele S Sampaio, and Marcelo de Lima Oliveira
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Latin Americans ,Consensus ,Standardization ,Statement (logic) ,Ultrasonography, Doppler, Transcranial ,Right-to-left shunt ,Contrast Media ,Foramen Ovale, Patent ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical physics ,business.industry ,Diagnostic test ,Contrast (statistics) ,medicine.disease ,Transcranial Doppler ,Stroke ,Neurology ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,cardiovascular system ,Patent foramen ovale ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: The role of patent foramen ovale is a field of debate and current publications have increasing controversies about the patients’ management in young undetermined stroke. Work up with echocardiography and transcranial Doppler (TCD) can aid the decision with better anatomical and functional characterization of right-to-left shunt (RLS). Medical and interventional strategy may benefit from this information. Summary: a group of experts from the Latin American participants of the Neurosonology Research Group (NSRG) of World Federation of Neurology created a task force to review literature and describe the better methodology of contrast TCD (c-TCD). All signatories of the present consensus statement have published at least one study on TCD as an author or co-author in an indexed journal. Two meetings were held while the consensus statement was being drafted, during which controversial issues were discussed and voted on by the statement signatories. The statement paper was reviewed and approved by the Executive Committee of the NSRG of the World Federation of Neurology. The main objective of this consensus statement is to establish a standardization of the c-TCD technique and its interpretation, in order to improve the informative quality of the method, resulting in expanding the application of TCD in the clinical setting. These recommendations optimize the comparison of different diagnostic methods and encourage the use of c-TCD for RLS screening and complementary diagnosis in multicenter studies.
- Published
- 2019