| Literature DB >> 32733707 |
Ali Kord1,2, Behnam Rabiee1, Siwen Wang3, Sara Rostami1, Ron C Gaba1,2, Karen L Xie1.
Abstract
A global outbreak of a novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pneumonia began in December 2019 in Wuhan, China. The World Health Organization (WHO) announced a pandemic on March 11, 2020. The rapid rise in the case numbers and mortality led to the saturation of hospitals in many countries. COVID-19 patients usually present with fever, fatigue, dry cough, and dyspnea. Given the shortage of diagnostic kits in many countries and very high sensitivity of computed tomography (CT) for diagnosis of COVID-19 in clinically suspicious patients, the chest CT has been implemented among the primary initial methods of diagnosis before the confirmatory laboratory tests. This puts radiologists and radiology staff on the front line of this alarming pandemic. This report summarizes chest CT findings of COVID-19 patients to facilitate diagnosis and reviews a list of necessary precautions and safety measures for diagnostic and interventional radiology personnel. These precautionary plans are extremely important to avoid contamination of the health-care providers, as well as cross-contamination between patients.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32733707 PMCID: PMC7376426 DOI: 10.1155/2020/7159091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Res Pract ISSN: 2090-195X
Figure 1A 26-year-old male with a recent diagnosis of diabetes presented with several days of progressive myalgia, cough, chills, and dyspnea and intermittent generalized crampy mild abdominal pain. (a) The chest radiograph was negative for consolidation. (b, c) The CT pulmonary arteriogram was performed for the same patient to rule out pulmonary embolism and showed multiple patchy, lower-lobe-prominent, nodular ground-glass opacities (arrows). The patient was tested positive for COVID-19.
Figure 2A 67-year-old male with a past medical history of sudden cardiac arrest with the placement of a defibrillator and a recent travel history to Europe presented with nonproductive cough, myalgia, and fever. (a, b) The CT pulmonary arteriogram was performed to rule out pulmonary embolism and demonstrated multiple patchy, peripheral, more organized ground-glass opacities (arrows) compared to the patient in Figure 1. The patient was tested positive for COVID-19.
Figure 3Proposed precautions for diagnostic radiology for COVID-19 outbreak based on the WHO and CDC recommendations.
Figure 4Proposed precautions for interventional radiology for COVID-19 outbreak based on the WHO and CDC recommendations and ongoing studies.