| Literature DB >> 33912572 |
Xingwang Jia1, Pengjun Zhang2, Yaping Tian3, Junli Wang4, Huadong Zeng4, Jun Wang4, Jiao Liu1, Zeyan Chen1, Lijun Zhang1, Haihong He1, Kunlun He3,5, Yajie Liu6.
Abstract
Background: Nucleic acid detection and CT scanning have been reported in COVID-19 diagnosis. Here, we aimed to investigate the clinical significance of IgM and IgG testing for the diagnosis of highly suspected COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; CT scan; IgG; IgM; nucleic acid test
Year: 2021 PMID: 33912572 PMCID: PMC8071939 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2021.569266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Characteristics and clinical features of patients with suspected COVID-19.
| Male | 24 | 42.11 |
| Female | 33 | 57.89 |
| <18 | 4 | 7.02 |
| 18–45 | 43 | 75.44 |
| 46–65 | 10 | 17.54 |
| Fever | 35 | 61.4 |
| Cough | 27 | 47.37 |
| Fatigue | 5 | 8.77 |
| Shortness of breath | 1 | 1.75 |
| Asymptomatic | 4 | 7.02 |
| Others (headache, sore throat, diarrhea, and so on) | 8 | 14.04 |
| Characteristic changes | 40 | 70.18 |
| Normal | 17 | 29.82 |
Exposure times for NAAT and serological tests.
| All | 43 | 12.86 ± 9.94 | 1–34 | 12 (3, 20) | |
| Positive | 18 | 10.28 ± 7.15 | 1–34 | 9 (3, 17.5) | |
| Negative | 25 | 14.72 ± 12.31 | 1–21 | 14 (3.5, 24.5) | |
| All | 43 | 23.21 ± 8.48 | 6–39 | 24 (17, 29) | |
| Positive | 34 | 22.82 ± 7.93 | 10–39 | 24 (17.75, 29) | |
| Negative | 9 | 24.67 ± 10.70 | 6–39 | 26 (14.5, 35.5) | |
P > 0.05 means the data are normally distributed. Nucleic acid amplification tests, NAAT.
Figure 1IgM and IgG detection among the 33 patients with negative COVID-19 nucleic acid results. (A) The IgM-value of 20 patients was more than 0.88 U/L. (B) The IgG-value of 15 patients was more than 1.02 U/L.
Figure 2IgM and IgG detection among the 24 patients with positive COVID-19 nucleic acid results. (A) The IgM-value of 19 patients was more than 0.88 U/L. (B) The IgG-value of 16 patients was more than 1.02 U/L.
Figure 3Comparison of exposure times for NAAT and serological tests. (A) The SARS-CoV-2 exposure time between the nucleic acid amplification test (NAAT) positive group and the NAAT negative group. (B) The SARS-CoV-2 exposure time between the serological test positive group and the serological test negative group.
Figure 4Combination of IgM and IgG detection of COVID-19. (A) The positive diagnostic rate with a combination of IgM and IgG detection for 33 patients with negative COVID-19 nucleic acid test results was 72.73%. (B) The positive diagnostic rate with a combination of IgM and IgG detection for 24 patients with positive COVID-19 nucleic acid test results was 87.50%.
Figure 5Patient case CT scan. (A) For patient 55, the nucleic acid detection result was negative, but the IgM and IgG results were positive. In the lower regions of both lungs, large fuzzy shadows, GGO, and a slightly fan-shaped distribution were observed. (B) In patient 19, the nucleic acid detection result was positive, but the IgM and IgG results were negative, and no clear lesions were found in the lungs.
Figure 6Association of CT results with PCR results and with serological results. (A) The proportion of positive NAAT between the positive and negative CT imaging groups. (B) The serological results between the positive and negative CT imaging groups.