Echoes from Within: Mapping Gastrointestinal Obstruction with Ultrasound.

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2025-10

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Abstract

Patients presenting with abdominal pain and/or distension require rapid diagnostics to narrow the differential diagnosis from a long list of obstructive gastrointestinal (GI) pathologies that may appear clinically similar but warrant distinct management. While the workup of abdominal distension currently centers around computed tomography (CT), this modality is costly, requires radiation exposure, and necessitates patient transport, potentially delaying care. In contrast, point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) avoids ionizing radiation and the need for patient transport while providing some insight into the gastrointestinal size and function. While POCUS cannot currently replace CT in the definitive diagnosis of GI obstructive pathologies, it remains a promising tool to help with the initial triage and monitoring responses to therapy for several causes of functional and/or mechanical GI obstruction, such as gastric dilation, ileus, and small bowel obstruction. Because the obstruction severity and features can evolve over time, POCUS enables serial examinations to monitor the progression or resolution. This manuscript reviews characteristic sonographic findings that help distinguish obstructive GI conditions and highlights practical techniques for integrating gastric and intestinal POCUS to improve diagnostic accuracy and expedite treatment.

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bowel ultrasound, gastric ultrasound, ileus, pneumoperitoneum, point-of-care-ultrasound, small bowel obstruction

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.3390/diagnostics15192511

Publication Info

Abramson, Lior, Rebecca G Theophanous, Brice Lefler, Lindsey Wu, Amber L Bowman, Jacqueline K Olive and Yuriy S Bronshteyn (2025). Echoes from Within: Mapping Gastrointestinal Obstruction with Ultrasound. Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland), 15(19). p. 2511. 10.3390/diagnostics15192511 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/33514.

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Scholars@Duke

Theophanous

Rebecca George Theophanous

Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine

Rebecca Theophanous, MD, MHSc, FAEMUS is an Emergency Ultrasound Faculty at Duke University Hospital and the Durham VA Healthcare System. 

She is actively involved with clinical ultrasound education, teaching residents and students on shift, performing weekly ultrasound image review, presenting monthly advanced ultrasound talks, and teaching at monthly resident simulation sessions.

Her first-author publications investigate the diagnostic utility and accuracy of 3D ultrasound for assessing ocular complaints, and she developed a point-of-care ultrasound implementation intervention for VA clinicians (funded by an SAEMF/AEUS grant in 2022-2023). Furthermore, she completed a Master of Health Sciences degree through Duke’s Clinical Research Training Program and served as site PI for the Reason3 POCUS in cardiac arrest trial. Her recent SAEM ARMED MedEd studies involve implementation and testing of POCUS simulation-training methods (nerve block training funded by SAEMF), resident and faculty development, and POCUS competency testing.

Dr. Theophanous leads as an AAEM-EUS councilor and SCUF Education fellowship curriculum subcommittee lead. She has presented both didactic and research-based talks at national conferences and has experience writing POCUS guidelines and policy on her hospital’s POCUS taskforce. Finally, she is a reviewer for multiple medical journals, including for the Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine.

Wu

Lindsey Caroline Wu

Assistant Professor of Medicine
Bowman

Amber Leigh Bowman

Assistant Professor of Medicine
Olive

Jacqueline Olive

House Staff
Bronshteyn

Yuriy Semenovich Bronshteyn

Associate Professor of Anesthesiology

I'm an intensivist and anesthesiologist with additional expertise in diagnostic point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS).  I'm interested in using diagnostic POCUS to help improve the care of critically ill patients.  My training in diagnostic POCUS includes all of the following: board certification (Diplomate status) in Critical Care Echocardiography, board certification (Diplomate status) in Advanced Perioperative Transesophgeal Echocardiography, and completion of the American College of Chest Physicians/CHEST ICU POCUS Certificate Program.  Finally, I am the immediate past Editor-in-Chief and current Editor for the American Society of Anesthesiologists' Editorial Board on POCUS and Section Editor for POCUS for OpenAnesthesia.org.  Outside of diagnostic ultrasound, my other board certifications are in the following medical specialties: Anesthesiology, Critical Care Medicine, and Neuro Critical Care.


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