Emergency Medicine Teaching Hub
POCUS LEARNING HUB
Structured point-of-care ultrasound learning for emergency physicians. Diagnostic and procedural modules aligned to RCEM, BMUS, and UK emergency medicine curricula.
Diagnostic POCUS
Core bedside ultrasound applications for emergency medicine. Each module covers indications, technique, interpretation, and common pitfalls.
Indications
- Blunt or penetrating torso trauma
- Haemodynamic instability with unknown source
- Trauma primary survey adjunct (ATLS/RCEM guidance)
- Repeat scanning for evolving haemoperitoneum
Probe & Views
- Curvilinear 3.5–5 MHz probe
- Right upper quadrant (Morison’s pouch & right hemidiaphragm)
- Left upper quadrant (splenorenal recess & left hemidiaphragm)
- Suprapubic (pelvic free fluid, transverse and longitudinal)
- Subxiphoid (pericardial effusion/tamponade)
- Bilateral anterior chest (pneumothorax — lung sliding, barcode sign)
Key Findings & Pitfalls
- Free fluid appears as anechoic (black) stripe between organs
- Minimum detectable volume ~200 mL in Morison’s pouch
- False negative: retroperitoneal bleeding, early solid organ injury, bowel injury
- False positive: pre-existing ascites, physiological pelvic fluid
- Absent lung sliding — consider pneumothorax (confirm with M-mode barcode sign)
- Always correlate with clinical picture; eFAST is a screening tool, not definitive
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Acute dyspnoea — differentiate cardiac vs pulmonary cause
- Suspected pneumothorax (trauma or spontaneous)
- Pleural effusion assessment and volume estimation
- Suspected pulmonary oedema (B-lines)
- Consolidation / pneumonia (hepatisation pattern)
Probe & Technique
- Linear high-frequency probe (pneumothorax, lung sliding)
- Curvilinear probe (effusion, consolidation, deeper structures)
- BLUE protocol zones: upper/lower anterior, lateral, PLAPS point
- M-mode for lung sliding confirmation (seashore vs barcode sign)
Key Findings
- A-lines — normal horizontal artefacts (also seen in pneumothorax and COPD)
- B-lines — vertical laser-like artefacts; 3+ per zone suggests interstitial oedema
- Lung sliding — shimmering at pleural line; absent in pneumothorax
- Lung point — transition between sliding and non-sliding; specific for pneumothorax
- Consolidation — tissue-like (hepatised) lung, dynamic air bronchograms
- Effusion — anechoic collection above diaphragm, quad/sinusoid sign
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Cardiac arrest — assess for cardiac activity (Resuscitation Council UK guidance)
- Undifferentiated shock (tamponade, RV dilatation, hypovolaemia)
- Suspected pericardial effusion / tamponade
- Gross LV systolic function assessment (“eyeball” squeeze)
- Acute PE — RV dilatation and interventricular septum bowing
Views
- Subxiphoid 4-chamber — best first view; pericardial effusion, cardiac activity
- Parasternal long axis (PLAX) — LV/RV size, mitral/aortic valves, effusion
- Parasternal short axis (PSAX) — D-sign (RV pressure overload), LV function
- Apical 4-chamber — RV:LV ratio, global function, valve regurgitation
- IVC assessment — subcostal longitudinal; diameter and collapsibility for volume status
Key Findings & Pitfalls
- Pericardial fat pad can mimic small effusion (usually anterior, echogenic)
- RV:LV ratio >1:1 in apical view suggests significant RV strain
- IVC >2.1 cm with <50% collapse suggests raised CVP
- Tamponade: diastolic RA/RV collapse with clinical context
- During cardiac arrest: use pulse checks to minimise CPR interruption (<10 seconds)
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Suspected abdominal aortic aneurysm (pulsatile abdominal mass, shock)
- Undifferentiated hypotension in elderly patient
- Abdominal/back/flank pain with haemodynamic compromise
- Screening in high-risk populations (NICE AAA screening guidance)
Probe & Technique
- Curvilinear 3.5–5 MHz probe
- Measure outer wall to outer wall in transverse (AP diameter)
- Scan from xiphoid to bifurcation (at umbilicus)
- Three levels: proximal (coeliac trunk), mid (renal arteries), distal (bifurcation)
Key Findings & Pitfalls
- Normal aortic diameter <3 cm; AAA defined as ≥3 cm
- Surgical emergency if >5.5 cm or symptomatic at any size
- Intraluminal thrombus may make lumen appear normal — always measure outer-to-outer
- Bowel gas can obscure views — use graded compression, reposition patient
- Ruptured AAA: free fluid + large aorta + clinical shock = do not delay for CT
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Unilateral lower limb swelling with raised Wells score
- Suspected DVT when formal imaging delayed or unavailable
- Risk stratification in suspected PE pathway (NICE CG144)
Probe & Technique
- Linear high-frequency probe (7.5–12 MHz)
- 2-point compression: common femoral vein (CFV) and popliteal vein
- 3-point compression: add superficial femoral vein at mid-thigh
- Complete compressibility of vein walls = no DVT at that point
- Augmentation with distal calf squeeze if needed
Key Findings & Pitfalls
- Non-compressible vein = DVT until proven otherwise
- Sensitivity of 2-point CUS: ~95% for proximal DVT
- May miss isolated calf vein DVT — correlate with clinical probability
- Chronic DVT may show thickened, echogenic walls — compare with contralateral side
- Lymphadenopathy or Baker’s cyst can mimic DVT — assess compressibility
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Renal colic — assess for hydronephrosis
- Acute urinary retention — bladder volume estimation
- AKI — exclude obstructive uropathy
- Haematuria assessment (alongside formal imaging)
Probe & Technique
- Curvilinear 3.5–5 MHz probe
- Kidneys: coronal view from posterior axillary line (right: use liver as window)
- Bladder: suprapubic transverse and longitudinal; calculate volume (L × W × H × 0.52)
- Compare bilateral renal pelvis to identify unilateral dilatation
Key Findings & Pitfalls
- Grade 1 hydronephrosis: mild pelvic dilatation; Grade 4: cortical thinning
- Sensitivity for hydronephrosis ~90% but may be absent early in acute obstruction
- Extrarenal pelvis (anatomical variant) can mimic mild hydronephrosis
- Full bladder can cause bilateral mild pyelectasis — rescan post-void
- Bladder >300 mL in acute retention; consider catheterisation >500 mL
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Differentiate abscess from cellulitis (drainable vs non-drainable)
- Foreign body localisation (wood, glass, metal)
- Joint effusion assessment (knee, hip in paediatrics)
- Tendon injury evaluation (Achilles, patellar)
Probe & Technique
- Linear high-frequency probe (7.5–15 MHz)
- Scan in two planes (transverse and longitudinal) over area of concern
- Compare with contralateral side when appropriate
- Use colour Doppler to identify surrounding hyperaemia (abscess wall)
Key Findings & Pitfalls
- Abscess: hypoechoic collection, posterior acoustic enhancement, compressible, may have internal debris
- Cellulitis: thickened subcutaneous tissue with cobblestoning but no drainable collection
- Foreign body: hyperechoic linear structure with posterior shadow or reverberation artefact
- Small abscess (<2 cm) may respond to antibiotics alone — clinical correlation required
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Acute vision loss — retinal detachment, vitreous haemorrhage
- Suspected raised ICP — optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) measurement
- Periorbital swelling preventing direct fundoscopy
- Intraocular foreign body localisation (penetrating eye injury)
Probe & Technique
- Linear high-frequency probe (7.5–12 MHz) with generous gel
- Apply over closed eyelid with minimal pressure
- ONSD: measure 3 mm behind the globe, perpendicular to the optic nerve
- Contraindicated with suspected globe rupture (open globe injury)
Key Findings
- Retinal detachment: bright, tethered membrane floating within vitreous
- Vitreous haemorrhage: swirling echogenic debris in vitreous cavity
- ONSD >5.0 mm in adults correlates with raised intracranial pressure
- Lens dislocation: displaced hyperechoic lens within vitreous
Tutorial Resources
Procedural POCUS
Ultrasound-guided procedures for emergency practice. Real-time guidance improves first-pass success and reduces complications.
Use only within local Trust policy, supervision, and documented competence.
Indications
- Difficult peripheral IV access (DIVA) — NICE recommends USS guidance
- Central venous catheter insertion (IJ, subclavian, femoral)
- Arterial line placement
- Confirmation of catheter position (vein vs artery)
Technique Principles
- Linear high-frequency probe with sterile cover
- Short-axis (out-of-plane): cross-sectional view, real-time needle tip tracking
- Long-axis (in-plane): full needle visualisation, higher technical skill
- Confirm vein: compressible, non-pulsatile, augments with Valsalva
- Confirm artery: non-compressible, pulsatile, bright red on aspiration
Key Considerations
- NICE MTG49 recommends USS for CVC insertion to reduce mechanical complications
- USS-guided peripheral access improves first-attempt success from ~30% to ~80% in DIVA patients
- Always confirm wire/catheter position before dilatation
- Post-procedure: confirm no pneumothorax (lung sliding) for IJ/subclavian lines
Tutorial Resources
Applications
- Abscess drainage — mark depth and location; avoid adjacent neurovascular structures
- Pleural aspiration/chest drain — identify effusion, measure depth, avoid diaphragm (BTS guidelines)
- Paracentesis — identify largest pocket, confirm bowel-free window
- Pericardiocentesis — subxiphoid approach under real-time guidance; life-saving in tamponade
Safety Principles
- Mark site with patient in procedure position — fluid shifts with repositioning
- Use real-time guidance where possible (not just pre-procedure marking)
- Always confirm target (fluid collection) immediately before needle insertion
- BTS: USS-guided pleural procedures reduce iatrogenic pneumothorax by 70%
Use only within local Trust policy, supervision, and documented competence.
Tutorial Resources
USS-Guided Nerve Blocks
Ultrasound-guided regional anaesthesia techniques for emergency medicine. Reduce opioid requirements and provide targeted analgesia.
Use only within local Trust policy, supervision, and documented competence.
Indications
- Neck of femur fracture (NICE CG124 recommends early nerve block)
- Femoral shaft fracture
- Anterior thigh laceration repair
- Quadriceps tendon injury
Anatomy & Technique
- Linear high-frequency probe placed at inguinal crease
- Identify: femoral artery, femoral vein (medial), femoral nerve (lateral to artery, under fascia iliaca)
- In-plane approach from lateral to medial
- Deposit local anaesthetic around nerve, deep to fascia iliaca
- Typical dose: 15–20 mL 0.25% levobupivacaine (max 2 mg/kg)
Key Points & Safety
- Aspirate before injection to exclude intravascular placement
- Watch for LAST (local anaesthetic systemic toxicity) — have Intralipid available
- Motor block expected — warn patient about weight-bearing
- Document block, dose, time, and motor/sensory assessment
- Contraindicated if local infection, allergy, or patient refusal
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Hip fracture analgesia (NICE CG124 — first-line if available)
- Proximal femoral fracture, acetabular fracture
- Broader coverage than femoral nerve block (femoral + lateral cutaneous nerves)
- Burn care to anterior/lateral thigh
Anatomy & Technique
- Linear probe placed at inguinal crease, lateral to femoral artery
- Identify fascia lata (superficial) and fascia iliaca (deeper) — two fascial “pops”
- In-plane needle approach from lateral
- Deposit 30–40 mL 0.25% levobupivacaine beneath fascia iliaca (max 2 mg/kg)
- Look for fascial lifting and spread on ultrasound
Key Points
- Higher volume block — dose calculation critical, especially in elderly/frail patients
- Onset 15–30 minutes; duration 6–12 hours
- May partially block obturator nerve — improved hip fracture pain relief
- LAST risk: have 20% lipid emulsion (Intralipid) drawn up and resuscitation equipment available
Contraindications
- Patient refusal or inability to consent without an appropriate best-interests process
- Infection at the injection site
- Known allergy to local anaesthetic
- Previous femoral bypass graft in the groin (relative)
- Caution with significant coagulopathy — weigh benefit against bleeding risk
Complications
- Local anaesthetic systemic toxicity (LAST)
- Vascular puncture or haematoma
- Intravascular injection
- Block failure or incomplete analgesia
- Transient femoral nerve motor block — counsel re falls risk
Safety considerations
- Calculate the maximum weight-based local anaesthetic dose and document drug, concentration, and volume.
- Aspirate intermittently and inject under direct ultrasound vision, keeping the needle tip in view.
- Monitor the patient with resuscitation facilities available; assess neurovascular status before and after.
Escalation triggers
- Signs of LAST (perioral tingling, agitation, seizures, arrhythmia) — start LAST management and call for senior/anaesthetic help.
- Expanding groin haematoma or signs of limb ischaemia.
- Inadequate analgesia despite a correctly placed block — discuss alternative strategies with seniors.
Anticoagulation considerations
- A fascia iliaca block is a relatively superficial, compressible field block; it can often proceed in anticoagulated hip-fracture patients when clinically indicated.
- Weigh bleeding risk against analgesic benefit and follow local and regional anaesthesia guidance; seek senior advice if uncertain.
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Hand lacerations requiring repair (distribution-specific block)
- Distal radius/ulna fracture reduction
- Finger/hand abscess drainage
- Foreign body removal from hand
Anatomy & Technique
- Linear high-frequency probe at wrist crease level
- Median nerve: between palmaris longus and FCR tendons; deep to flexor retinaculum
- Ulnar nerve: medial to ulnar artery, beneath FCU tendon
- Radial nerve: lateral to radial artery at anatomical snuffbox level (superficial branch)
- 1–3 mL 1% lidocaine or 0.25% levobupivacaine per nerve
Key Points
- USS guidance improves success rate and reduces vascular injection risk
- Avoid epinephrine in digital/end-artery distributions (historical concern, though increasingly debated)
- Document pre- and post-block neurological assessment
- Combination blocks provide near-complete hand anaesthesia
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Finger laceration repair
- Nail bed repair or nail removal
- Finger dislocation reduction
- Paronychia/felon drainage
- Foreign body removal from digit
Technique
- Traditional: landmark-based ring block at base of finger (web space approach or dorsal approach)
- USS-guided: linear probe to visualise digital nerves; needle guided perineurally
- 1–2 mL 1% lidocaine per injection point (total 3–4 mL per digit)
- Block both palmar digital nerves (medial and lateral)
- Wait 5–10 minutes for full effect; test before procedure
Key Points
- Traditionally taught without epinephrine (end-artery concern), though WALANT technique increasingly accepted
- USS guidance most useful for difficult anatomy or failed landmark block
- Duration: 1–2 hours with lidocaine; 4–8 hours with levobupivacaine
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Multiple rib fractures — opioid-sparing analgesia
- Chest drain insertion analgesia
- Lateral chest wall injuries
- Alternative to thoracic epidural or paravertebral block in ED
Anatomy & Technique
- Linear probe placed at mid-axillary line, 4th–5th rib level
- Identify latissimus dorsi (superficial), serratus anterior, rib, intercostal muscles
- In-plane approach; deposit 20–30 mL 0.25% levobupivacaine deep to serratus anterior
- Covers lateral cutaneous branches of intercostal nerves (T2–T9)
Key Points
- Growing evidence base in emergency medicine for rib fracture pain management
- Simpler than paravertebral or erector spinae blocks
- Minimal haemodynamic effects compared to thoracic epidural
- Document competency and consent; have LAST rescue available
Use only within local Trust policy, supervision, and documented competence.
Tutorial Resources
Indications
- Unilateral rib fractures (posterior/lateral)
- Thoracotomy or chest wall procedure pain
- Abdominal wall analgesia (renal colic, flank procedures)
- Emerging role in ED for multimodal opioid-sparing analgesia
Anatomy & Technique
- Linear or curvilinear probe placed longitudinally over transverse process
- Identify trapezius, rhomboid, erector spinae muscles and the transverse process
- In-plane approach; deposit 20–30 mL 0.25% levobupivacaine deep to erector spinae, superficial to transverse process
- Local anaesthetic spreads across multiple dermatomes (typically 3–4 levels)
Key Points
- Relatively superficial block with lower risk of pneumothorax than paravertebral
- Mechanism: local anaesthetic diffuses anteriorly to reach dorsal rami and ventral rami
- Can be performed seated or lateral — practical in ED setting
- Emerging evidence; not yet universally adopted in UK emergency medicine
Use only within local Trust policy, supervision, and documented competence.
Tutorial Resources
UK & International POCUS References
Authoritative guidelines, learning platforms, and reference standards for point-of-care ultrasound in emergency medicine.
UK Guidelines & Standards
- RCEM — Royal College of Emergency Medicine curriculum and guidance
- RCEMLearning — Online learning platform for emergency medicine
- BMUS — British Medical Ultrasound Society guidelines and training standards
- RCR — Royal College of Radiologists imaging guidelines
- NICE — National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidance
- Resuscitation Council UK — Resuscitation guidelines including echo in cardiac arrest
International Resources
- ACEP Sonoguide — American College of Emergency Physicians ultrasound guide
- IFEM — International Federation for Emergency Medicine POCUS guidance
- LITFL — Life in the Fast Lane — emergency medicine and critical care education
Clinical Pearl
"Great clinicians combine evidence, physiology, and human judgment."
Dr Joshua Igwe · FRCEM
Related learning areas on this site.
Other clinical modules, procedural guides, and examination resources.