Emergency department diagnosis and outcome of non-traumatic hypotension
Keywords:
hypotension, shock, non-traumatic, outcome, diagnosisAbstract
This study aimed to determine the level of evidence on the diagnosis and prognosis of hypotensive nontraumatic patients in the prehospital and emergency department. The PRISMA statement was followed in the conduct of this study. Seven full-text articles were determined to be qualified and incorporated into the qualitative examination. We looked via electronic databases (PubMed, Google Scholar, and Cochrane) to find English-language publications published between 2006 and 2024. Seven papers total, four cohort studies, two cross-sectional studies, and one prospective exploratory research, were included in this systematic review. The included studies' durations varied from seven months to four years. Ultrasonography guided emergency diagnostic decisions in hypotension-presenting patients, and those decisions agreed well with the ultimate clinical diagnosis made after analyzing retrospective data. It was not possible to compare etiological characteristics in any of the seven qualifying investigations. By reducing the number of hypotensive states that may be accurately detected and facilitating the early discovery of potentially deadly diseases that can be treated rapidly, a lung examination performed as part of an ultrasonographic technique may expedite the diagnostic process.
