| Literature DB >> 33362917 |
Antonello D'Andrea1, Juri Radmilovic2, Andreina Carbone3, Alberto Forni2, Ercole Tagliamonte2, Lucia Riegler2, Biagio Liccardo3, Fabio Crescibene4, Cesare Sirignano5, Giovanna Esposito2, Eduardo Bossone6.
Abstract
The integrated clinical, laboratory and ultrasound approach is essential for the diagnosis, evaluation and monitoring of the patient's therapy in coronavirus disease 2019 pneumonia. The ideal imaging approach in this context is not yet well defined. Chest X-ray is characterized by low sensitivity in identifying earlier lung changes. The "bedside" pulmonary ultrasound has an undeniable series of advantages in the patient at high infectious risk and can provide incremental data in the respiratory intensive care for the serial control of the individual patient as well as for the home delivery of the stabilized subjects. Pulmonary computed tomography shows high sensitivity but should not be routinely performed in all patients, because in the first 48 h it can be absolutely negative and in the late phase the imaging findings may not change the therapeutic approach. Echocardiography should be limited to patients with hemodynamic instability to assess ventricular function and pulmonary pressures. ©The Author(s) 2020. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Echocardiography; Interstitial pneumonia; Lung ultrasound; Pulmonary computed tomography; Thromboembolism
Year: 2020 PMID: 33362917 PMCID: PMC7745467 DOI: 10.4329/wjr.v12.i11.261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Radiol ISSN: 1949-8470
Comparison of the three imaging methods in patient with coronavirus disease 2019 pneumonia
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| Lung thickening | Nd | Lung thickening | |
| Confluent B lines | Aspect of white cottony lung infiltrate | Images of lung infiltrates | |
| Small peripheral consolidations | Increase in hyperechoic areas | Subpleural consolidations | |
| Translobar and non-translobar consolidations | Large translobar confluent and white thickening | Translobar consolidations | |
| Multilobar distributionFront and posterior multiple sector scans (if possible) | Cotton aspect of multilobar and bilateral interstitial pathology | Anomalies with distribution on more than two lobes and bilateral | |
| Rare pleural effusion | Rare pleural effusion | Rare pleural effusion | |
| Clinical aspect of the patient and three techniques compared | |||
| Early stage | Focal B lines | It may be negative or with few interstitial lobular changes | Few multilobar ground glass areas |
| Mild infection phase | Focal B lines with pleural thickening | Multilobar interstitial alterations with cottony aspect | Confluent opacities with ground glass areas |
| Severe infection stage | Parenchymal consolidations (hepatization of the parenchyma) | Increase in interstitial consolidations with multilobar thickening phenomena | Interstitial alveolar syndrome consolidations air bronchogram |
CT: Computed tomography; HRCT: High resolution computed tomography.
Figure 1Standard chest X-ray and pulmonary computed tomography in a patient during early–stage and during the first week of coronavirus disease 2019 pneumonia. A, B: Presymptomatic phase: Few areas of hyperdensity with ground glass on computed tomography, mainly in the lower and posterior fields; C, D: First week of symptoms: Bilateral ground glass opacities more confluent on computed tomography.
Figure 2Standard chest X-ray and pulmonary computed tomography in a patient during the second week of severe coronavirus disease 2019 pneumonia.
Figure 3Correlations between bedside lung ultrasound and pulmonary computed tomography during the different phases of coronavirus disease 2019 pneumonia.
Figure 4Standard echocardiography in a patient with coronavirus disease 2019 pneumonia and right ventricular impairment. A: In apical four-chamber view, mild right ventricular dilatation; B: Mild tricuspid regurgitation; C: With moderate impairment of right ventricular function with reduced tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion; D: Increase in pulmonary pressures.
Figure 5Standard echocardiography, lung ultrasound and pulmonary computed tomography in a patient with coronavirus disease 2019 pneumonia. A: In apical four-chamber view, mild right ventricular dilatation; B: With increase in pulmonary pressures; C: By lung ultrasound; D: Pulmonary computed tomography ground glass with presence of consolidation areas.