1. Lichtenstein DA, Mezière GA. Relevance of lung ultrasound in the diagnosis of acute respiratory failure: the BLUE protocol. Chest. 2008; 134:117–25.
Article
2. Lichtenstein D. Fluid administration limited by lung sonography: the place of lung ultrasound in assessment of acute circulatory failure (the FALLS-protocol). Expert Rev Respir Med. 2012; 6:155–62.
Article
3. Terkawi AS, Karakitsos D, Elbarbary M, Blaivas M, Durieux ME. Ultrasound for the anesthesiologists: present and future. ScientificWorldJournal. 2013; 2013:683685.
Article
4. Lichtenstein D, Mezière G, Seitz J. The dynamic air bronchogram: a lung ultrasound sign of alveolar consolidation ruling out atelectasis. Chest. 2009; 135:1421–5.
5. Lichtenstein DA. How can the use of lung ultrasound in cardiac arrest make ultrasound a holistic discipline: the example of the SESAME-protocol. Med Ultrason. 2014; 16:252–5.
Article
6. Lichtenstein DA, Mezière GA, Lagoueyte JF, Biderman P, Goldstein I, Gepner A. A-lines and B-lines: lung ultrasound as a bedside tool for predicting pulmonary artery occlusion pressure in the critically ill. Chest. 2009; 136:1014–20.
7. Lichtenstein D, Mezière G, Biderman P, Gepner A. The “lung point”: an ultrasound sign specific to pneumothorax. Intensive Care Med. 2000; 26:1434–40.
Article
8. Oveland NP, Lossius HM, Wemmelund K, Stokkeland PJ, Knudsen L, Sloth E. Using thoracic ultrasonography to accurately assess pneumothorax progression during positive pressure ventilation: a comparison with CT scanning. Chest. 2013; 143:415–22.
9. Blaivas M, Lyon M, Duggal S. A prospective comparison of supine chest radiography and bedside ultrasound for the diagnosis of traumatic pneumothorax. Acad Emerg Med. 2005; 12:844–9.
Article
10. Lichtenstein DA. Ultrasound in the management of thoracic disease. Crit Care Med. 2007; 35(5 Suppl):S250–61.
Article
11. Kang HK, So HJ, Kim DH, Koo HK, Park HK, Lee SS, et al. The use of lung ultrasound in a surgical intensive care unit. Korean J Crit Care Med. 2017; 32:323–32.
Article