6533b822fe1ef96bd127ced9

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Errors in imaging patients in the emergency setting

Fabio PintoAlfonso ReginelliGiuseppe Lo ReLuca BruneseLuigia RomanoFederico MidiriCarlo MuzjAntonio Pinto

subject

Diagnostic ImagingRadiographyMEDLINEDiagnostic Error030218 nuclear medicine & medical imagingHospital03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNuclear Medicine and ImagingMedical imagingHumansMedicineRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingDiagnostic ErrorsEmergency Radiology Special FeatureMedical diagnosisEmergency Servicebusiness.industryGeneral MedicineEmergency departmentmedicine.diseasePolytrauma030220 oncology & carcinogenesisRadiological weaponDiagnostic assessmentMedical emergencyRadiologyEmergency Service HospitalbusinessHumans; Diagnostic Errors; Diagnostic Imaging; Emergency Service Hospital; Radiology Nuclear Medicine and ImagingHuman

description

Emergency and trauma care produces a "perfect storm" for radiological errors: uncooperative patients, inadequate histories, time-critical decisions, concurrent tasks and often junior personnel working after hours in busy emergency departments. The main cause of diagnostic errors in the emergency department is the failure to correctly interpret radiographs, and the majority of diagnoses missed on radiographs are fractures. Missed diagnoses potentially have important consequences for patients, clinicians and radiologists. Radiologists play a pivotal role in the diagnostic assessment of polytrauma patients and of patients with non-traumatic craniothoracoabdominal emergencies, and key elements to reduce errors in the emergency setting are knowledge, experience and the correct application of imaging protocols. This article aims to highlight the definition and classification of errors in radiology, the causes of errors in emergency radiology and the spectrum of diagnostic errors in radiography, ultrasonography and CT in the emergency setting.

https://doi.org/10.1259/bjr.20150914