MDCalc

Focused Assessment with Sonography for Trauma (FAST)

Predicts presence of pericardial or intra-abdominal injury after penetrating or blunt trauma.

FAST results alone should not dictate the decision to operate, and negative FAST does not exclude injury. This calculator is meant to help with interpretation of FAST findings, which are at least partially dependent on the user's sonographic technique.

Pericardial fluid
Right upper quadrant (Morison’s pouch) fluid
Left upper quadrant (splenorenal recess) fluid
Suprapubic fluid

Result:

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Advice
  • FAST results alone should not determine the decision to operate. However, FAST can be a helpful adjunct in clinical decision making, particularly in an unstable blunt trauma patient in order to rapidly assess the chest and abdomen for potential causes of hypotension.
  • Most clinicians use the low frequency phased array ultrasound probe (a.k.a. cardiac probe), to obtain all windows in FAST.
  • Pericardial: place probe in the subxiphoid area and orient towards patient's left shoulder. Apply downward pressure to look under the costal margin and towards the heart. The heart and pericardium will come into view, allowing inspection for hemopericardium and ultrasound findings of cardiac tamponade.
  • Right upper quadrant: place probe in right anterior to mid axillary line (between 11th–12th ribs). Visualization of the hepatorenal recess (Morison's pouch) allows the assessment for hemoperitoneum in the right upper quadrant. Blood most likely accumulates here if hemoperitoneum is present.
  • Left upper quadrant: apply transducer firmly onto the skin in left posterior axillary line (between the 9th–10th ribs) to visualize splenorenal and subphrenic spaces.
  • In practice, it is important to remember that the right and left upper quadrant views are often more posterior than anticipated. It can be helpful to bring the probe all the way down to the stretcher in order to best visualize these windows.
  • Suprapubic: place transducer superior to pubic symphysis and fan probe inferiorly to visualize the bladder.
Management

Suggested management (clinician must consider additional clinical information including hemodynamic stability and clinical suspicion for injury):

Pericardial FAST (penetrating thoracic trauma)

  • Positive: emergent surgical intervention recommended. Median sternotomy preferred if the patient is stable; otherwise, use left anterolateral thoracotomy.
  • Equivocal: pericardial window or formal transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) recommended.
  • Negative: close clinical monitoring or discharge recommended, according to clinical suspicion for injury.

Abdominal FAST (blunt abdominal trauma)

  • Positive: in the unstable patient, emergent exploratory laparotomy is recommended. In the stable patient, cross-sectional imaging (CT scan) in recommended.
  • Equivocal: in the unstable patient, diagnostic peritoneal aspiration (DPA) is recommended. In the stable patient, cross-sectional imaging (CT scan) is recommended.
  • Negative: in the unstable patient, diagnostic peritoneal aspiration (DPA) is recommended if clinical suspicion for intra-abdominal bleeding exists. In the stable patient, CT scan, close clinical monitoring, or discharge is recommended, according to clinical suspicion for injury.
Critical Actions
  • Repeating FAST while preparing to perform diagnostic peritoneal aspiration is useful to quickly reassess unstable patients with blunt abdominal trauma with initially negative FAST. Intra-abdominal hemorrhage may not be significant enough on presentation to be FAST-positive initially.
  • Be cautious if pericardial FAST is negative in patients with penetrating thoracic trauma, especially if unstable. Cardiac injuries can decompress through the injured pericardium, most commonly into the left hemithorax, resulting in negative pericardial FAST (Ball 2009). Therefore, unstable patients with this mechanism of injury and FAST finding should undergo a chest x-ray. If it reveals a hemothorax, a chest tube must be placed. Ongoing or high-volume chest tube output in this clinical context may be from cardiac injury.