| Literature DB >> 33931378 |
A O Peixoto1, R M Costa2, R Uzun3, A M A Fraga4, J D Ribeiro5, F A L Marson6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The COVID-19 pandemic originated in China and within about 4 months affected individuals all over the world. One of the limitations to the management of the COVID-19 is the diagnostic imaging to evaluate lung impairment and the patients' clinical evolution, mainly, in more severe cases that require admission into the intensive care unit. Among image examinations, lung ultrasound (LU) might be a useful tool to employ in the treatment of such patients.Entities:
Keywords: Image examination; Lung disease; Lung ultrasound; SARS-CoV-2
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33931378 PMCID: PMC7983424 DOI: 10.1016/j.pulmoe.2021.02.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pulmonology ISSN: 2531-0429
Figure 1The systematic review flowchart. The systematic review was carried out using the data base PubMed/Medline and according to the preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analysis (PRISMA) covering the period from November 2019 to October 2020. The following descriptors guided the search: ((Lung ultrasound OR ultrasound OR lung ultrasonography OR lung US) AND (coronavirus disease-19 OR coronavirus disease OR corona virus OR COVID-19 OR COVID19 OR SARS-CoV-2)). LU = lung ultrasound; CT = computed tomography; CXR = chest X-ray; PET-CT = positron emission tomography combined with computed tomography; COVID-19 = coronavirus disease-2019.
Clinical characteristics of studies evaluating lung ultrasound in COVID-19.
| Study | Country | Type of study | Patients and participants included in the studies | Diagnosis of COVID-19 | Clinical picture | Comorbidities | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thomas et al. | Canada | Case report | 64 years old, female and health professional. | RT-PCR | Productive cough and dyspnea on exertion. After 6 days in O2 catheter → invasive mechanical ventilaton. 88% SpO2. | NS | Support: Invasive mechanical ventilation + intubation. |
| Soldati et al. | Italy | Protocol | 30 patients. | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Buonsenso et al. | Italy | Case report | 1 adult, 52 years old, male. | NS | Fever, asthenia, cough, headache, myalgia, photophobia for 1 week; 90% SpO2. Dyspnea and bilateral rales. | NS | NS |
| Kim et al. | Canada | Case report | 1 man, 67 years old. | NS | Fever and chills for 5 days, non-productive cough, myalgia and malaise. 80/40 arterial pressure, 38.7oC temperature, 120 cardiac rate, 24 RF, 93% SpO2 in ambient air. | Hypertension and dyslipidemia. | NS |
| Denina et al. | Italy | Descriptive observational | 8 children and adolescents (0–17 years old), divided into 3 female and 5 male participants. | NS | Fever (6 patients); dry cough (5 patients); dyspnea/tachypnea (3 patients); odynophagia (3 patients); vomit or diarrhea (3 patients) and hypoxemia (2 patients). | NS | Oxygen therapy. |
| Yasukawa et al. | USA | Analytical observational | 10 adults (31–71 years old), divided into 7 male and 3 female participants. | Detection of SARS-CoV-2 in nasopharyngeal swab RT-PCR. | Fever, cough, dyspnea, SpO2 from 89 to 96%. | Rheumatoid arthritis, SAH, asthma, sleep obstructive apnea, obesity, hyperlipidemia and atrial fibrillation. | Oxygen therapy with mask (4 patients). |
| Musolino et al. | Italy | Analytical observational | 10 children (mean age 11 years). | Nasopharyngeal swab RT-PCR. | Fever (80%), cough (50%), anosmia (10%), arthralgia (30%), chest pain (20%), headache (20%). | NS | Patient did not require hospital treatment or ICU. |
| Ji et al. | China | Case report | 1 female adult (60 years old). | Oropharyngeal swab RT-PCR. | Fever, chills, dry cough, fatigue and dyspnea. RF 30 breaths per minute; 92% SpO2 in ambient air. | SAH and systemic lupus erythematosus. | Respiratory support and interferon inhalation. |
| Buosenso et al. | Italy | Case report | 4 pregnant women (31–42 years old — mean age 37 years). Gestacional periods=17, 24, 35 and 38 weeks. | Nasopharyngeal swab RT-PCR. | NS | No comorbidities. | All patients received hydroxychloroquine, lopinavir/ritonavir, no need for ICU. Tocilizumab was added for the patient based on the pulmonary impairment revealed by the LU. |
| Inchingolo et al. | Italy | Descriptive observational | 1 pregnant woman (age not informed). Gestational period = 23 weeks. | Oropharyngeal swab RT-PCR. | Cough and fever, eupneic, no respiratory discomfort, 98% SpO2 in ambient air. Bilateral reduced vesicular murmur in bases. | NS | NS |
| Duclos et al. | France | Case report | 1 male adult. | Nasopharyngeal swab RT-PCR. | Dry cough (4 patients); anosmia (1 patient); fever ≥38 °C (3 patients) temperature. | NS | NS |
| Zieleskiewicz et al. | France | Case report | 2 older people (65-year-old male; and 72-year-old female participants). | NS | NS | NS | Mechanical ventilation for the 65-year-old patient. |
| Youssef et al. | Italy | Case report/Letter to the editor | 1 pregnant woman, 33 years old, gestational period = 26 weeks. | Positive nasopharyngeal swab. | Fever, mild chest pain and dyspnea for three days, with normal oxygen saturation. | NS | NS |
| Tung-Chen et al. | Spain | Case report | 35-year-old male adult. | RT-PCR | Abrupt chills and sickness, dry cough after 20 h of isolation, bilateral cephalgia and normal lung auscultation. | NS | Supportive therapy was started with ibuprofen and paracetamol. After confirming worsening of symptoms and LU findings, hydroxychloroquine 200mg twice a day and azithromycin were added to the treatment. |
| Lu et al. | China | Observational | 30 (16 male and 14 female) with mean age of 52 ± 15 years. | RT-PCR — including two patients with positive results. | Fever: 20 patients (66.7%); cough: 14 patients (46.7%); fatigue: 5 patients (16.7%); muscle soreness: 5 patients (16.7%); nausea: 2 patients (6.7%); no obvious symptoms: 3 patients (10%). | NS | NS |
| Tan et al. | China | Case series | 12 (4 male and 8 female), ranging from 52 to 79 years old, mean age 60.5 years. | RT-PCR | Moderate (4 patients): fever, diarrhea or other respiratory tract symptoms. | Hypertension (1 patient), diabetes mellitus (1 patient) and cardiovascular diseases (2 patients). | NS |
| Mafort et al. | Brazil | Transversal observational | 409 (134 male and 275 female), ranging from 35 to 51 years old (mean age 41 years) — all of them health care professionals. | RT-PCR | Cough (84%); fever (69.7%); dyspnea (36.2%). | NS | NS |
| Veronese et al. | Italy | Retrospective study | 48 patients living in nursing homes (women = 81.3%), mean age 84.1 years. | RT-PCR | NS | Dementia and mostly bedridden patients. | NS |
| Zieleskiewicz et al. | France | Observational study with retrospective analysis | 100 (65 male and 35 female), ranging from 54 to 77 years old (mean age 61 years). | RT-PCR | Acute dyspnea (SpO2 <94% or breathing difficulty). | Body mass index >30 (17%); SAH (24%); coronariopathy (11%); cardiac failure (16%); diabetes mellitus (16%); chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (10%); cancer (7%); chronic kidney disease (2%), hepatopathy (1%) and immunosuppression (1%). | NS |
| Yassa et al. | Turkey | Prospective cohort | 296 pregnant women (23 with positive result for COVID-19), age range from 17 to 43 years old (mean age 26.8 years); gestacional period from 5 to 42 weeks (mean gestacional period 35.18 weeks). | RT-PCR | Pregnant women admitted in Gynecology and Obstetrics unit for any reason were tested for SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR and examined with LU; 23 pregnant women with positive SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR result, from whom 11 (3.72%) were symptomatic and 12 (4.05%) were asymptomatic. | NS | NS |
| Zhao et al. | China | Retrospective study | 35 (24 men and 11 women) patients divided into 2 groups: refractory (7 patients), mean age 62.14 years and non-refractory (28 patients), mean age 64.14 years. | RT-PCR | 1. Severe: respiratory distress with RF ≥30, SpO2 ≤93% and PaO2/FiO2 ≤300 mmHg, at rest. Non-refractory. | NS | High flow nasal cannula; mechanical ventilation; ECMO. |
| Dargent et al. | France | Prospective study | 10 (8 men and 2 women) ages ranging from 46 to 63 (mean age 56 years). | RT-PCR | Moderate to severe ARDS. | Obesity | Mechanical ventilation. |
| Bonadia et al. | Italy | Prospective cohort | 41 (28 men and 13 women) mean age 60 ± 22.7 years. | RT-PCR | 24 patients (58.5%) with dyspnea; 32 patients (78%) with fever; 27 patients (65.8%) with cough. | NS | Ventilatory support: none in 11 (26.8%); low flow oxygen in 13 (31.7%); high flow oxygen in 2 (4.9%); non-invasive positive pressure ventilation in 9 (21.9%); intubation in 6 (14.6%). |
| Deng et al. | China | Retrospective study | 128* (75 men and 53 women) ages ranging from 55 to 71 years old (mean age 65 years). | RT-PCR | Divided into 4 groups: | 44 (34%) patients with hypertension; 22 (17.2%) patients with coronary disease; 19 (14,8%) patients with diabetes melittus; fatigue (96.1%); fever (95.3%) and breathlessness (94.5%); decreased SpO2 in 99 (77.3%) patients. | Oxygen therapy in all patients. Non-invasive ventilation in 38 patients; mechanical ventilation in 31 patients; ECMO in 4 patients; and 42 patients in the ICU. * Out of the 128 participants, 7 remained in hospital, 84 were discharged and 37 died. |
| Pagano et al. | Italy | Observational study | 18 (13 men and 5 women), mean age 69 years. | RT-PCR | Light to moderate ARDS. | NS | Non-invasive CPAP. |
| Martinez et al. | Spain | Case series | 3 (pediatrics age range without specifying the individuals’ ages). | RT-PCR | NS | Severe, but not specific. | NS |
| Yu et al. | China | Case report | Case 1 = 54-year-old man. | RT-PCR | Case 1 = cough. | NS | NS |
| Case 2 = 37-year-old woman. | RT-PCR | Case 2 = tightness in chest for a week, solved at admission. Without respiratory symptoms. | NS | NS | |||
| Cho et al. | South Korea | Case series | 6 (2 men and 4 women) ages ranging from 16 months to 85 years old. | RT-PCR | Case 1 = sore throat, backache, dry cough and fever on the 5th day. | NS | Case 1 = lopinavir/ritonavir. |
| RT-PCR | Case 2 = cough and chills for a day, fever >37.5 °C temperature and myalgia. | NS | Case 2 = lopinavir/ritonavir. | ||||
| RT-PCR | Case 3 = dyspnea and fever >37.5 °C temperature. | NS | Case 3 = OTI and mechanical ventilation. | ||||
| RT-PCR | Case 4 = fever for 8 days, dyspnea. | NS | Case 4 = empirical antibiotic therapy and oseltamivir followed by lopinavir/ritonavir; OTI, methylprednisolone + inhaled nitric oxide and veno-venous ECMO. | ||||
| RT-PCR | Case 5 = rhinorrhea, nasal obstruction and sputum. | NS | Case 5 = NS | ||||
| RT-PCR | Case 6 = asymptomatic and stable. | NS | Case 6 = no need for treatment. | ||||
| Lichter et al. | Israel | Prospective study | 120 (74 men and 46 women) mean age 64.7 ± 18.2 years. | RT-PCR | Respiratory symptoms; fever; chest pain; fatigue; SpO2 with 95% median and 89–98% interval. | Found in 81% of the patients: hypertension in 67 (55.8%); diabetes mellitus in 34 (28.3); obesity (not informed %); atrial fibrilation/flutter in 21 (17.5%); ischemic cardiac disease in 21 (17.5%); transient ischemic attack/stroke in 14 (11.7%). | NS |
| Lu et al. | China | Observational study | 16 (9 men and 7 women), ages ranging from 47 to 68 years old (mean age 58 years). | NS | Severe COVID-19 consistent with any of the following criteria: respiratory difficulty, RF >30 or SpO2 <93% in ambient air or PaO2/FiO2 ≤300 mmHg or pulmonary lesion with over 50% progression in 24-48 h in imaging examination. | NS | High flow cannula, non-invasive ventilation and OTI with mechanical ventilation. |
| Dini et al. | Italy | Observational study | 150 (23 men and 127 women), ages ranging from 72 to 106 years old (mean age 88 years). | RT-PCR | Respiratory symptoms, cough, dyspnea, fever, asthenia. | 92 (61.3%) patients with hypertension; 35 (23%) patients with chronic kidney disease; 28 (18.7%) patients with diabetes mellitus; 25 (16.7%) patients with coronary disease; 41 (27.3%) patients with other cardiac diseases; 44 (29.3%) patients with stroke; 28 (18.7%) patients with atrial fibrillation; 12 (8%) patients with cardiac failure; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in 13 (8.7%) patients. | NS |
| Iodice et al. | Italy | Observational study | 29 (26 men and 3 women), ages ranging from 34 to 79 years old (mean age 60 years). | RT-PCR | Fever: 26 (90%) patients; cough: 15 (52%) patients; dyspnea: 8 (28%) patients; arthralgia: 4 (14%) patients; conjunctivitis: 2 (7%) patients. | 15 (62%) patients with hypertension; 5 (21%) patients with diabetes mellitus; 4 (17%) patients with asthma; 6 (21%) smoker patients. | Oxygen therapy in 23 (79%) patients. |
| Tung-Chen et al. | Spain | Prospective study | 51 (28 men and 23 women), mean age 61.4 years. | RT-PCR | Dyspnea: 29 (56.9%) patients; fever: 23 (45.1%) patients; myasthenia: 22 (43.1%) patients; gastrointestinal tract symptoms: 10 (19.6%) patients; cough: 22 (43.1%) patients; ageusia/anosmia: 4 (7.8%) patients. | 14 (27.5%) patients with cardiovascular disease; 12 (23.5%) patients with pulmonary disease; 10 (19.6%) patients with diabetes mellitus; 6 (11.8%) patients with chronic kidney disease; 8 (15.8%) patients with immunosuppression; 20 (39.2%) patients with hypertension; 13 (25.5%) patients with malignity. | NS |
| Gregorio-Hernández et al. | Spain | Case report | Case 1 (male newborn)= 2 days old and gestacional period = 38 + 3 | RT-PCR | Case 1 = mother with postpartum fever without respiratory symptoms. | Case 1: meconium aspiration syndrome. | Case 1: mechanical ventilation, nitric oxide, vasoactive drugs, cooling therapy and anticonvulsants (due to severe hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy). |
| Case 2 (male newborn)=78 days old and gestacional period=39+3. | RT-PCR | Case 2 = asymptomatic, but investigated after case 1 diagnosis. | Case 2: prematurity and bronchopulmonary dysplasia. | Case 2: oxygen therapy. | |||
| Case 3 (male newborn) = 6 days old and gestacional period=39+6 (gestacional period at the moment of the diagnosis). | RT-PCR | Case 3=asymptomatic, but investigated after case 1 diagnosis. | Case 3: Hirschsprung. | Case 3: no need for respiratory support. | |||
| LeVine et al. | Bhutan | Case report | A 76-year-old man. | RT-PCR | Swell, loss of appetite, diarrhea and fatigue in the first 48 h. Cough and dyspnea with 78% SpO2 in ambient air on the 4th day of symptoms. | Hypertension, hyperlipidemia, neuropathy and splenectomy due to mantle cell lymphoma. | Oxygen therapy, OTI and prone position, intravenous immunoglobulin, oseltamivir, ceftriaxone, doxycycline, lopinavir/ritonavir and antibiotic substitution with meropenem and vancomycin. |
| Nouvenne et al. | Italy | Observational study | 83 participants (23 men and 60 women), mean age 85 ± 8 years. | RT-PCR | 33 (40%) patients with cough; 52 (63%) patients with fever; 33 (40%) patients with dyspnea or light desaturation. | NS | Empirical pharmacological treatment with antibiotics, hydroxychloroquine and corticosteroids. |
| Yang et al. | China | Observational study | 29 participants (18 men and 11 women), mean age 55.2 ± 16 years. | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Schmid et al. | Germany | Case report | A 76-year-old man. | NS | Fever for four days; dry cough and diarrhea; tachypnea, respiratory failure, 93% SpO2 (with O2 15 L/min in mask). | Absence of comorbidities. | Intensive treatment, not specified. |
| López Zúñiga et al. | Spain | Case report | Case 1 = 87-year-old man. | Cases 1 = positive RT-PCR. | Case 1 = dyspnea, dry cough, no fever. | NS | NS |
| Case 2 = 53-year-old man. | Case 2 = negative RT-PCR with positive serology. | Case 2 = fever, cough, dyspnea. | |||||
| Case 3= 55-year-old man. | Case 3 = positive RT-PCR. | Case 3 = dyspnea. | |||||
| Case 4 = 35-year-old-man. | Case 4=diagnositc exam not specified. | Case 4 = fever for 3 days. | |||||
| Giacomelli et al. | Italy | Case report | A 67-year-old man. | RT-PCR | Fever for 7 days, absence of cough or dyspnea; 89% SpO2 in ambient air. | Hypertension; surgical background of abdominal aorta aneurysm open repair with graft in 2014. | Antiviral therapy (lopinavir/ritonavir); hydroxychloroquine; thrombotic prophylaxis with prophylactic subcutaneous enoxaparin; CPAP and introduction of methylprednisolone and tocilizumab; OTI and prone position. After worsening and evidence of the abdominal aorta graft thrombosis, introduction of sodium heparin and the use of vasoactive drugs. |
| Nouvenne et al. | Italy | Transversal observational | 26 participants (14 men and 12 women), mean age 64 ± 16 years. | RT-PCR | 25 (96%) patients with fever; 21 (81%) patients with cough; 10 (38%) patients with dyspnea. | Comorbidities in 19 (73%) patients, but not specified. | Oxygen therapy in 17 (26%) patients. |
| Peyrony et al. | France | Prospective observational cohort | 391 participants (241 men and 150 women) ages ranging from 48 to 71 years old (mean age 62 years). | Positive RT-PCR in 225 (57.6%) patients. | Fever in 176 (78.2%) patients; cough in 158 (70.2%) patients; dyspnea in 131 (58.2%) patients; myalgia in 71 (31.6%) patients; rhinitis/pharyngitis in 19 (8.4%) patients; anosmia in 31 (13.8%) patients. | Immunosuppression in 195 (50.5%) patients. Chronic pulmonary disease in 85 (22.1%) patients. Cardiovascular disease in 156 (40.4%) patients. Obesity in 58 (15.2%) participants. | NS |
| Rodriguez-Gonzalez et al. | Spain | Case report | A 6-month-old male participant. | Negative RT-PCR. Detection of anti-SARS-CoV-2 Immunoglobulin M and anti-SARS-CoV-2 Immunoglobulin G on day 21 of illness. | 2-week history of nasal congestion and cough, irritability, tachypnoea (80 breaths per minute), cyanosis (81% SpO2), tachycardia (170 beats per minute), hypotension (59/32 mmHg), poor perfusion, weak peripheral pulses and hepatomegaly (3 cm). | Short bowel syndrome with fever and cyanosis; cardiogenic shock secondary to severe pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular failure without pulmonary thromboembolism condition labelled as pediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome. | Prophylaxis with low molecular weight heparin; mechanical ventilation and prone position; inotropic support with milrinone and norepinephrine and broad-spectrum antibiotics (meropenem, vancomycin and fluconazole); Tocilizumab, azithromycin, hydroxychloroquine and methylprednisolone. |
COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; RT-PCR = real time polymerase chain reaction; O2 = oxygen; SpO2 = oxygen peripheral saturation; ICU = intensive care unit; NS = not stated; RF = respiratory frequency; LU = lung ultrasound; SAH = systemic arterial hypertension; FiO2 = fraction of inspired oxygen; OTI = orotracheal intubation; CPAP = Continuous Positive Airway Pressure; HRCT= high resolution computerized tomography; ECMO = Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation; PaO2 = oxygen arterial pressure; ARDS= acute respiratory distress syndrome; % = percentage; USA=United States of America; SARS-CoV-2=Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2.
Characteristics of the lung ultrasound and other image exams findings in COVID-19.
| Study | Lung ultrasound findings | Other image exams | Scanning areas/LU technique/sort of equipment | IPE and machine cleaning | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thomas et al. | Multifocal B lines; pleural and subpleural thickening; consolidation. | Thorax X-ray with bilateral infiltrates. | NS | NS | LU might be useful to manage COVID-19 suspected patients, even if it does not allow the differentiation of the viral pneumonia causes. |
| Soldati et al. | Small and large consolidated areas, pleural irregularities, blank vertical areas and extensive blank lung with or without consolidation. | None | LU score:0–3 points in 14 areas (three posterior, two lateral and two posterior in each hemithorax). Portable machines dedicated to exclusive use in patients with COVID-19. Convex or Linear probes, according to the patient’s body size. | Yes | Experience of the service in the standardization of COVID-19 assistance with emphasis on the need for a shared data base. |
| Buonsenso et al. | Irregular pleural line with small subpleural consolidations, blank lung areas, irregular and confluent vertical artifacts (B lines). Bilaterally present preserved areas and mixed with affected areas. | Thorax X-ray with doubtful left peri-hylar hypodiafania and HRCT (ground glass pattern). | A total of 12 areas were evaluated. Portable convex probe (3.5MHz). | Yes | Evaluation using portable LU and two examiners. |
| Kim et al. | B lines with variable aspect (focal, multifocal and confluent), subpleural consolidations, pleural thickening or irregularity and larger consolidations with occasional air bronchograms. | HRTC with ground glass opacity. POCUS for cardiac scan. | Handheld devices. Without probe description in the article. | Complete + ultrasound protective equipment. | Antisepsis care and preventing contamination during LU. |
| Denina et al. | Subpleural consolidations (2 patients). Confluent B lines (5 patients). Agreement with radiologic findings in 7 out of the 8 cases. One patient presented B line interstitial pattern, despite the normal thorax X-ray. | Thorax X-ray with consolidation in two patients and ground glass opacities. | Linear transducer from 7.5 to 13 MHz. | NS | LU showing high agreement with thorax X-ray examination; might reduce radiologic exams; able to stratify the patients according to severity into mild, moderate and severe; follow-up, exam repetition before discharge. |
| Yasukawa et al. | Glass rockets with or without Birolleau variant (white lung); confluent B lines and thick and irregular pleural lines; small subpleura consolidations (5 patients); large consolidation (1 patient). | X-ray and tomography. | NS | Yes | LU might be more sensitive than thorax X-ray in the diagnosis of interstitial syndrome. When resources are limited, where thorax radiograph, tomography and SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR are not promptly available or the response time is long, LU might help COVID-19 diagnosis. |
| Musolino et al. | Vertical artifacts, white lung areas, subpleural consolidations and pleural irregularities. | X-ray (unspecified diffuse interstitial thickening), tomography (the findings of one case correlated to the LU findings) and resonance (signs of pneumonia). | Pocket wireless device. Sitting patients. Exam performed by 2 pediatricians with over 5 years of ultrasound experience. LU performed within 12 h of hospital admission. | Yes | Useful tool for the diagnosis and follow-up of COVID-19 related pneumonia. This study aimed at evaluating the LU role in COVID-19 child patients. |
| Ji et al. | Multiple B lines, small consolidations and pleural line thickening. | Thorax tomography (multiple bilateral and peripheral ground glass opacities). | NS | NS | LU showed reduction of B lines in the evolution (initially they were 88 and reduced to 18) with disappearance of consolidations. |
| Buosenso et al. | Irregularities in the pleural line. Consolidations with white lung area. Vertical artefacts. | Thorax X-ray was done in two patients only. Patient 1 was compatible with interstitial disease and patient 4 with hyperlucency and basal bilateral alteration. None submitted to tomography. | A total of 14 regions were evaluated. LU was carried out before the positive SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR result. | NS | LU evaluation along the illness evolution showing improvement of the LU findings with relevant role in the therapeutic decision. |
| Inchingolo et al. | Diffuse hyperechoic vertical artifacts with thickened pleural liens and white lung with irregular distribution. | Thorax X-ray performed on the same day, did not suggest viral pneumonia. | A total of 14 regions (3 posterior, 2 lateral and 2 anterior in each hemithorax) along the paravertebral, middle axillar and hemiclavicular lines were evaluated. Convex wireless transducer (3.5MHz). | NS | LU was shown to be an accurate imaging method to detect pleural and peripheral pulmonary conditions, including pneumonia, with great accuracy, even in pregnant women. |
| Duclos et al. | A lines. Focal and confluent B lines. Pleural line thickening and irregularities. | Tomography: multilobar asymmetric lung lesions with peripheral distribution of ground glass opacities, consolidation, and crazy pavement pattern. | NS | NS | Direct comparison between LU and tomography and close time relation. |
| Zieleskiewicz et al. | Elderly, 72 years old: coalescent B lines and pleural line irregularities alternating with normal area. | Tomography: 72-year-old female patient: bilateral and multilobar ground-glass peripheral opacities. | NS | NS | Comparison between tomography and LU was carried out at the same time. Emphasizes the LU potential to evaluate COVID-19 associated pneumonia in several stages. |
| Elderly, 65 years old: pleural line irregularities associated with coalescent B lines, or multifocal subpleural consolidations. | Tomography: 65-year-old male patient: subpleural fibrosis, honeycomb, traction bronchiectasis with anterior distribution and interlobular septal thickening. | NS | NS | ||
| Youssef et al. | Pleural thickening. Bilateral diffuse coalescent B lines. | Normal obstetric ultrasound. | A total of 6 regions (2 anterior, 2 lateral and 2 posterior in each hemithorax) were evaluated. Linear or convex probes. | NS | Simplified LU systematic approach to motivate its adoption by obstetricians and gynaecologists. |
| Tung-Chen et al., | Day 1 = A-lines; day 2 = pleural effusion; day 4 = subpleural consolidation; day 10 = diffuse B-lines; day 14 = irregular pleural lines and resolving B-lines; day 35 = A-lines. | Chest X-ray: local or bilateral patchy shadowing infiltrate. CT: ground glass opacities. | A total of 8 regions were evaluated. Curvilinear probe. | NS | LU guiding monitoring and therapeutic decision. |
| Lu et al. | 3 patients = normal aeration on LU; 27 patients = increased B-lines; 15 patients = coalescent B-lines (<3 mm); 5 patients = wide distance between B-lines (>7 mm) and the lung rocket sign; 3 patients = “white lung” sign; 6 patients = pulmonary consolidations including 2 with the presence of air bronchogram and 3 with shred signs; 3 patients = pleural thickening; 1 patient = pleural effusion; 1 patient = pneumothorax. | CT showed patchy ground glass opacities, consolidations, reticular shadows, small amount of pleural effusion. | Six regions (anterior superior, anterior inferior, lateral superior, lateral inferior, posterior superior and posterior inferior in each hemithorax) were evaluated and associated with a score method of 0–3 points in each area. Convex array transducer (2-5MHz) and linear array transducer (5-12MHz). | Yes | Comparison between LU score and tomography score was performed. Bedside ultrasound exhibits relatively low sensitivity with respect to lesions in the vicinity of the pulmonary hilum, which influences the quantitative assessment of lung lesions in patients with COVID-19. |
| Tan et al. | i. Thickened pleural line (12/12 patients); blurred or irregular (9/12 patients) and fragmented (6/12 patients); ii. Scattered B lines and comet tail signals (4/12 patients); partially diffuse (12/12 patients); completely diffuse with white lung (10/12 patients) or waterfall sign (4/12 patients); iii. Pulmonary consolidations or subpleural focal lesions <1 cm (5/12 patients); iv. Pleural effusion (1/12 patient). | CT with semi quantitative scoring method: ground-glass opacities, irregular pleural margin, septal or subpleural lines, honeycomb, subpleural cyst. | A total of 5 regions in each hemithorax were evaluated. BLUE protocol and BLUE Plus protocol were used in the study. The LU scoring system (i) pleural line involvement, including thickened, blurred, irregular or discontinuous pleural lines; (ii) lung parenchymal involvement, including B lines, partially diffused B lines, completely diffused B-lines (white lung) and lung consolidations; (iii) complications, including pneumothorax, emphysema, and pleural effusion. Portable device with convex array probe 2-5MHz. | NS | The study pointed out some differences in the LU findings in patients with COVID-19 related pneumonia and community-acquired pneumonia. The LU semiquantitative evaluation is viable to assess severity in interstitial pneumonia, including in patients with COVID-19. |
| Mafort et al. | B lines >2 (72.6%); coalescent B lines (36.2%); subpleural consolidations (8.06%). Unilateral lesions in 204 (49.9%) patients and bilateral in 205 (50.1%) patients. | Most patients were not submitted to CT. | A total of 12 areas (2 anterior, 2 lateral and 2 posterior in each hemithorax) were evaluated. Aeration score: 1 point=presence of >2 B lines; 2 points=presence of coalescent B lines; 3 points=presence of consolidations. | NS | Strong association between consolidation and dyspnea. LU findings can precede the patient clinical condition. LU shows prognostic capability in ARDS before evidence of hypoxemia, LU can define changes that affect the air/tissue relation on the lung surface. There is a correlation between LU and CT results with histopathological findings. In the study, the LU was not carried out in the patient follow-up/evolution and hospitalized patients were not included. |
| Veronese et al. | The most common findings of the study were not specified. | None. | A total of 12 areas (2 anterior, 2 lateral and 2 posterior in each hemithorax) were evaluated. LU score from 0 to 3 points, in which 1 point = presence of separated B lines occupying <50% of the pleural line; 2 points = presence of separated B lines occupying >50% of the pleural line; 3 points = lung thickening with a tissue aspect. | Complete | LU as mortality predictor = prognostic role. Greater accuracy for the LU when compared to the wrist oximeter. LU can be used in nursing homes or households. Study bias: small sample size and disregard of positive (such as medication therapy) or negative factors (such as comorbidities and polypharmacy). |
| Zieleskiewicz et al. | High diagnostic accuracy when compared to the X-ray in interstitial syndromes and alveolar consolidations. The most frequent LU findings were not specified in the study. | CT with ground glass opacity, consolidations and interlobular septal thickening. | A total of 12 areas were evaluated, with the posterior ones in the posterior axillary line, rather than accessing via paravertebral. | NS | LU score predictive of pneumonia severity, as evaluated in the CT and clinical characteristics. LU associated to severity evaluated by the CT and clinical parameters, with the possibility of substituting CT in the evaluation of the pulmonary involvement. POCUS for multiorgan evaluation: detection of deep venous thrombosis and acute right cardiac failure signals. |
| Yassa et al. | NS | Image with ionizing radiation in 1% — X-ray and CT (3 patients out of 296). | Convex transducer. A total of 14 areas (10 seconds per area) were evaluated. The patients were considered negative for SARS-CoV-2 infection suspicion when the LU score was 0 or 1 (in the absence of symptoms) point; however, patients were considered positive for SARS-CoV-2 infection in the presence of score 1 point and with symptoms, and scores 2 points and 3 points. | Complete | LU used to screen SARS-CoV-2 infection concluding that the LU findings were more sensitive than the maternal symptoms in the infection prediction. Potential to be used as a triage tool and in the evaluation of disease severity with the advantage of being used freely during pregnancy reducing exposure to radiation. |
| Zhao et al. | Most common findings in both groups were the B line patterns and shred sign. More ground glass opacity, consolidations and pleural effusion were observed in the refractory group. | Cites CT as gold standard, but does not explain its use in the patients of the study. | Convex transducer was used. A total of 10 areas (anterosuperior 2nd ICS and anteroinferior 5th ICS in the hemiclavicular line, laterosuperior 2nd ICS and lateroinferior 5th ICS in the mid-axillary line and posterior in the subscapular zone) were evaluated. LU score (from 0 to 40 points): 0 points = normal pattern with pleural sliding, parallel A lines and thin pleural line; 1 point = presence of B line patterns; 2 points = presence of ground glass signal with B lines occupying the whole screen; 3 points = presence of fragmentation signal similar to small subpleural consolidations; 4 points = presence of consolidation/pulmonary hepatization signal or pleural effusion. | Complete | All images were reviewed and scored by 2 medical doctors with over 5 years of experience in LU applied to critical care. LU used in the follow-up for evolution assessment: transformation of B lines into A lines; reduction and disappearance of consolidations; more consolidations and more interstitial syndrome pattern, which might mean disease worsening. LU can be used to evaluate aeration in critical patients. |
| Dargent et al. | B line patterns and consolidations. | CT: subpleural ground glass opacity with progressive extension and consolidations. | A total of 12 areas were evaluated. LU core from 0 to 3 points, in which 0 points = normal; 1 point =presence of well-defined B lines; 2 points = presence of coalescent B lines and/or subpleural thickening ≤15 mm and subpleural consolidations; 3 points = presence of consolidations (pleural thickening ≥15 mm), variation from 0 to 36 points. | NS | Higher score in deaths due to refractory hypoxemia and LU helped early diagnosis of pneumonia associated to mechanical ventilation. Good agrement between LU and CT for the presence of consolidations. |
| Bonadia et al. | Normal LU in three patients and pathological in 38 (92.7%) patients. | Pathological CXR in 34 (82.8%) patients and pathological CT in all patients submitted to examination (n = 17). | Portable, wireless device, with convex transducer. A total of 14 areas (2 anterior, 2 lateral and 3 posterior in each hemithorax) were evalauted during 10 seconds in each area. LU score from 0 to 3 points, where: 0 points = normal; 1 point = presence of regular or irregular pleural line with visible and non-confluent vertical artifacts; 2 points =presence of irregular pleural line with multiple and conludne vertical artifacts and/or subpleural consolidations; 3 points = presence of extensive and dense white lung areas with or without larger consolidations. | NS | Lung global assessment is mandatory, since each pulmonary area might be in distinct stages of the disease. LU carried out at the emergency room in the first evaluation is able to predict the global prognosis, the need for admission to the ICU and identify patients in greater death risk. |
| Deng et al. | Numerous and coalescent B lines with small multifocal consolidations in several regions — most common. | CT with ground glass opacity (96.1% patients), followed by consolidations (75.8% patients) and crazy paving pattern (ground glass opacity with overlapping of inter and intralobular septal thickening) (60.9% patients). | Convex transducer and adjusted around 10 cm deep. A total of 8 areas (2 anterior and 2 lateral in each hemithorax) were evaluated, in which the superior and inferior zones are delimited by the 3rd ICS. Images analyzed and scored by three blinded medical doctors with 3–6 years of experience. | NS | CT is not suitable for the follow-up of critically ill patients (despite being gold standard) due to transportation and medical team infection risks. |
| Presence of pleural line thickening and irregularities. | Most patients with bilateral and multifocal involvement. | LU score (0-24 points): 0 points = presence of A lines with pleural sliding or up to 2 isolated B lines; 1 point = presence of 3 or more spaced B lines restricted to a single ICS; 2 points=presence of multiple B lines (>50% of the area evaluated) with or without consolidations limited to the subpleural space; 3 points=presence of confluent or tissue-like pattern B lines, characterized by dynamic air bronchograms, defined as pulmonary consolidations. | LU carried out every 48 h after admission or when the examiners thought it was necessary. Change in score ≥2 points meant improvement, while ≤2 points meant worsening and = 1, unchanged condition. | ||
| Increase in B lines in different degrees and extension. | All patients showed peripheral pulmonary involvement. | The role of semi-quantitative scores in the follow-up of COVID-19 related pneumonia was studied. | |||
| Small and multifocal consolidations limited to the subpleural space. Also, consolidations in mass with dynamic air bronchograms ocurred. | Positive LU correlation with CT to evaluate the LU accuracy was higher in critical patients when compared to the severe ones. The patients had been diagnosed before the examination; therefore, the LU was used to evaluate the severity of the lesions, but not to diagnose the disease. The LU was more accurate in the evaluation of the worsening than the improvement or maintenance of the condition. | ||||
| Unusual pleural effusion and rare pneumothorax were found. | |||||
| Pagano et al. | LU used to verify alveolar recruitment after non-invasive CPAP. It was carried out before and after CPAP. | CT is considered gold standard in the quantitative evaluation of recruitment and pulmonary aeration, but it is not carried out due to certain issues such as transport logistics, contamination, instability of critical patients, among others. | A total of 12 areas (anterior, lateral and posterior, divided into upper and lower sections in each hemithorax) were evaluated. LU score from 0 to 3 points: 0 points = presence of A lines or below 3 isolated B lines; 1 point = presence of multiple and well-spaced B lines; 2 points = presence of coalescent B lines with or without small subpleural consolidations; 3 points = presence of pulmonary consolidation. Convex transducer. | NS | LU is a valid technique to assess alveolar recruitment, evaluation of extra-vascular pulmonary water and improvement after CPAP application. Patients that improved the PaO2/FiO2 relation after 1 h of CPAP showed lower mortality. |
| Martinez et al. | Pleural effusion in all patients, followed by diffuse and translobar subpleural consolidations, coalescent B lines and pleural line irregularities. No A line patterns were observed. Also, after a 3-month follow-up, all patients were asymptomatic, presented normal echocardiogram, no effusion and persistence of pleural thickening. | Cites CT as gold standard, but also the need for transfer of the critical/unstable patient, high infection risk and the ionizing radiation limits its use in children. | Linear transducer. A total of 10 areas (4 anterior — between the sternal and anterior axillary lines; 2 lateral — between the anterior and posterior axillary lines; 4 posterior — between the paravertebral and posterior axillary lines) were evaluated. | Cites sanitation/sterilization of transducers and the use of protection covers. | Infection in children is unusual and less severe. |
| Yu et al. | Case 1 = increased B lines and focal pulmonary consolidation. | Case 1 = thorax X-ray indicating pulmonary infection. CT with irregular shadows of high density and bilateral ground glass opacity. | Using remote ultrasound robotic device assisted by the 5G technology. | NS | Real time robotic scan using big data, cloud storage and artificial intelligence. A robotic arm provided the examiners with protection and reduced the number of professionals in contact with the patients with COVID-19. |
| Case 2 = partially thickened pleural line, intensive B lines, consistent with pneumonia signs. | Case 2 = multiple nodes with bilateral inflammatory appearance. | CT limitation in general application to all population groups (such as pregnant women and children). | |||
| Cho et al. | Early detection of B lines, in patients with normal X-ray, corresponding to the ground glass opacities in the CT. | CXR and CT at hospital admission, however, no findings were specified. | Microconvex transducer was used to evaluated 12 areas. BLUE protocol was applied and it was done the use of the Venice self-learning system with automatic identification of B lines (distinction from artifacts). LU score: 0 points = presence of ≤2 B lines; 1 point= presence of 3 or 4 B lines (B1 lines); 2 points= presence of ≥5 B lines (B2 lines); 3 points = presence of consolidation(s). | Not specified, but exemplifies complete garments | LU proved useful in the monitoring of the disease evolution. Also, LU in the triage of SARS-CoV-2 infected patients was able to indetify greater risk of respiratory failure. |
| Lichter et al. | Fragmented pleural thickening in 100 (83%) patients; irregular subpleural consolidations in at least one zone in 93 (78%) patients and pleural effusion in 9 (8%) patients. | CT with bilateral pulmonary infiltrates. CXR with bilateral infiltrates (39%); pleural effusion and rare lobar infiltrates (<15%). | Tranducer used for cardiac evaluation. A total of 12 areas (anterior, anterolateral and posterolateral in each hemithorax) were evaluated. LU score from 0 to 36 points: 0 points= presence of A lines; 1 point= presence of B1 lines (separated = moderate loss of pulmonary aeration); 2 points = presence of B2 lines (coalescent = severe loss of pulmonary aeration); 3 = presence of consolidation (complete loss of aeration). The pleural thickening was determined qualitatively. | Complete | LU identifies quickly the pulmonary involvement allowing stratification and prediction of the need for mechanical ventilation, mortality and outcome. The main factor responsible for the LU worse score was a new or greater involvement of the anterior pulmonary segments, a finding that can be used clinically as an alert of imminent clinical deterioration. |
| Lu et al. | NS | NS | Convex transducer (2-4MHz). A total of 12 areas were evalauted with LU score from 0 to 3 points for each of them (0–36 points in total). LU score: 0 (normal aeration) points= presence of pleural sliding with A lines or less than 2 vertical isolated B lines; 1 (moderate loss of pulmonary aeration) point= presence of spaced or coalescent B1 lines, multiple, well-defined or small juxtapleural consolidations; 2 ( severe loss of pulmonary aeration) points= presence of multiple vertical coalescent B2 lines or juxtapleural consolidations found in the whole area of one or two intercostal spaces and corresponding to alveolar edema; 3 points = presence of pulmonary consolidations with static or dynamic air bronchograms up to the complete loss of aeration. | NS | LU can be a more precise indicator of the ideal moment of intubation than the oxygenation index and the respiratory rate. |
| Dini et al. | Non-coalescent B lines in >3 zones (36 patients); coalescent B lines in >3 zones (32 patients); not consolidated hyperdense condition (30 patients); pleural effusion (11 patients). Pleural line abnormalities in 90% (irregularities, discontinuities and fragmentations). | None | Linear or convex portable wireless transducer. A total of 8 to 12 areas were evaluated. LU score from 0 to 3 points, where: 0 points=presence of normal pattern; A lines or insignificant B lines; 1 point=presence of non-coalescent B lines in >3 zones; 2 points=presence of coalescent B lines in >3 areas; 3 points=presence of not consolidated hyperdense condition. | Sanitation and disposable plastic packaging. Personal/Individual protection equipment not specified. | Serial evaluation strategy in population of older people in nursing homes and support institutions. |
| Iodice et al. | Multiple B lines and consolidations. White lung. | CT: bilateral multiple lesions; 80% showed bilateral ground glass opacity; 62% showed evidence of consolidation in the left lung and 69% had consolidation in the right lung; crazy paving pattern in 17%. | LU score were not informed. Convex (3-5MHz) and linear (9-12MHz) transducers. | NS | LU and CT carried out on the same day. Ground glass opacity showed correlation with the presence of B lines in LU and the crazy paving pattern correlated with white lung in LU. |
| convex (3.5-5 MHz) and linear (9- | |||||
| Tung Chen et al. | Bilateral, isolated or confluent B line pattern, pleural irregularity, presence of linear and subpleural consolidations. | CT in 51 patients: pleural thickening in 2 (1%); ground-glass opacity in 37 (72.5%); septal thickening in 18 (35.2%); crazy paving in 10 (19.6%); subpleural consolidation in 10 (19.6%); pleural effusion in 12 (23.5%). | A total of 12 areas with score from 0 to 3 points for each region evaluated (score from 0 to 36 points): 1 point= presence of irregular or isolated B lines; 2 points =presence of confluent B lines; 3 points = presence of consolidations or pleural effusion. | NS | Excellent correlation between CT and LU was observed. |
| Subpleural consolidations in posterior regions of the basal lobes were the most common finding. | CXR in 28 patients: ground-glass opacity in 12 (42.9%); interstitial pattern in 13 (46.4%). | Portable device and convex transducer (1.5–4.5 MHz). | LU showed accuracy similar to that of the CT to detect pulmonary abnormalities in patients with COVID-19. | ||
| Gregorio-Hernández et al. | Case 1 = LU in 3-day old patient without consolidation or coalescent B pattern; during evolution, presence of coalescent B lines and consolidation in the lateral and posterior areas. | NS | Portable device with linear transducer. A total of 6 areas were evaluated. LU score from 0 to 3 points (score from 0-18 points): 0 points = presence of A pattern; 1 point=presence of ≥3 B lines; 2 points= presence of agglomerated and coalescent B lines; 3 points = presence of extensive consolidation. | NS | LU use in the follow-up, repeated 48/48 h in the first week after diagnosis. Apperance of consolidations and coalescent B lines did not follow the respiratory deterioration. |
| LeVine et al. | B lines | CXR: light bilateral irregular infiltrates. CT: ground glass opacities consistent with acute respiratory distress syndrome. | NS | NS | LU and other imaging methods allowed early diagnosis of COVID-19 despite its atypical clinical presentation. |
| Nouvenne et al. | Normal LU in 27 (33%) patients; bilateral multiple subpleural consolidations in 32 (39%) patients; diffuse bilateral B lines or white lung in 24 (30%) patients; focal B lines in 17 (20%) patients; pleural effusion in 3 (4%) patients; isolated abnormalities in the pleural line in 3 (4%) patients. | NS | Portable device with convex transducer (panoramic exploration) and linear (detailing the pleural line and subpleural alterations). A total of 8 areas were evaluated with LU score from 0 to 3 points (score 0–24 points): 0 points=presence of regular pleural line, presence of A lines; 1 point=presence of discontinued pleural line, focal B lines; 2 points=presence of fragmented pleural line, subpleural consolidations; 3 points=presence of white lung with or without consolidations. | NS | Bedside LU as auxiliary diagnosis in extra-hospital situations. Integration of anamnesis with clinic and LU allow the refinement of the diagnosis of respiratory diseases in the elderly, and might eliminate the need for avoidable hospital admission. |
| Yang et al. | 540 pulmonary regions were evaluated: multiple B lines in 324 regions; consolidations in 220 regions; pleural effusion in 67 regions. | CT showing 209 abnormal regions: ground glass opacities in 208 regions; consolidations in 16 regions; pleural effusion in 14 regions. | A total of 12 areas were evaluated. | NS | LU and CT carried out in an interval ≤12 h. LU was more sensitive tha CT in the diagnosis of regional alveolar-interstitial pattern, alveolar-interstitial syndrome, consolidation and pleural effusion. |
| Schmid et al. | Irregular pleural line with partially confluent B lines, mainly anterior and above the left lung. Presence of pleural sliding. Consolidation with hepatic echogenic texture, air bronchogram and pleural effusion in the right costophrenic sinus. | CT with ground glass opacities in the left apical lobe and consolidations in the right basal lobe. | NS | NS | Patient developed ARDS and multiple organ failure and died on the 14th day of evolution. |
| López Zúñiga et al. | LU use only in case 4: pleural line thickening and irregularity. Diffuse B lines and consolidations. | CXR in cases 1 and 2: unequal, diffuse alveolar-interstitial opacities, with peripheral predominance and pulmonary bases. CXR in case 4: no abnormalities found. CT in case 3: density diffusely increased with mainly ground glass peripheral bilateral distribution pattern, thickening of the interlobular sept or bronchiectasis. | NS | NS | LU proposed as an alternative for the diagnosis and monitoring of patients with COVID-19 with higher sensitivity than CXR, despite its low specificity. |
| Giacomelli et al. | Bilateral moderate B lines, without pleural effusion. | CXR with interstitial thickening in the right mid and basal field. | NS | NS | SARS-CoV-2 associated to increased risk of thromboembolism due to inflammation, stasis and hypercoagulability condition. Patient with no signs of distal hypoperfusion at admission and ultrasound examination confirming graft patency, the only possible explanation would be hypercoagulability and COVID-19 related inflammation. Patient died. |
| Nouvennea et al. | Bilateral involvement in 26 (100%) patients with predominance of basal, medial, or apical lobe involvement in 3 (12%) patients. Pattern of alveolar-interstitial syndrome: (i) with distinct B lines in 7 (27%) patients; (ii) with confluent B lines (white lung) in 17 (73%) patients; (iii) subpleural consolidations in 17 (73%) patients; (iv) parenchymal consolidations in 13 (50%) patients. LU score 15±5 points. | CT with, n (%): 26 (100) bilateral involvement, 21 (81) mixed axial distribution, 23 (88) involvement of 6 pulmonary lobes; 6 (23) predominance of basal, medial, or apical lobe involvement, 26 (100) Ground-glass opacities, 13 (50) subpleural lines, 15 (58) fat vessel sign, 4 (15) crazy paving sign, 2 (8) basal consolidations, 1 (4) centrolobular nodules, 1 (4) pleural effusion, 2 (8) lymphadenopathy. | Convex transducer for panoramic view and linear for abnormalities in the pleural line. A total of 8 areas were evaluated. LU score from 0 to 3 points, scores 0–24 (points): 0 points=regular pleural line and presence of A lines; 1 point=presence of fragmented pleural line, focal B lines; 2 points=presence of irregular pleura line, subpleural consolidations; 3 points=white lung with or without consolidations. | Exclusive transducers, machine and operator protection with IPE. | 34% deaths of patients in hospital treatment. LU score, according to type, extension and severity of the alterations, presented statiscally significant correlation with the CT severity score and SpO2 in ambient air. |
| Peyrony et al. | LU was used in 48 (21.4%) patients and bilateral B lines were identified in 36 (76.6%) patients. | CXR carried out in 80 (35.6%) patients. Findings consistent with normality in 19 (84%) patients. | Scores and evaluation technique are not mentioned, portable device. | NS | In COVID-19 suspected patients, anosmia, high clinical probability and presence of bilateral B lines in LU increased the probability of disease identification. |
| Rodriguez-Gonzalez et al. | Irregular pleural line, B-lines, some coalescent, with bilateral patchy distribution, and small peripheral consolidations, which were larger in posterior-basal areas. | Thoracic angioCT-scan ruled-out massive pulmonary thromboembolism but showed a pattern of ground glass and numerous consolidations of predominance in the posterior-basal segments of both lungs. | NS | NS | A concerning association between COVID-19 and the novel multisystem inflammatory syndrome has been recently noticed and increasingly reported. A severe cardiovascular involvement associated with pediatric COVID-19, even without previous heart disease. The screening of myocardial dysfunction and pulmonary. Hypertension through cardiac biomarkers or echocardiography could be beneficial in severe COVID-19 pediatric cases. Some SARS-CoV-2-infected patients who became critically ill suffered a generalized thrombotic microvascular injury mediated by intense complement activation involving the lung. |
COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; NS = not stated; IPE = individual protection equipment; HRCT = high resolution computed tomography; CT = computed tomography; LU = lung ultrasound; CXR = chest-X ray; SpO2 = oxygen peripheral saturation; ARDS= acute respiratory distress syndrome; FiO2 = fraction of inspired oxygen; CPAP = Continuous Positive Airway Pressure; POCUS =point of care ultrasound; ICS = intercostal space; RT-PCR=real time polymerase chain reaction; SARS-CoV-2=Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2; ICU=intensive care unit; PaO2=oxygen arterial pressure; BLUE=Bedside Lung Ultrasound in and Emergency.
Figure 2Findings of the LU imaging described in the study.