Pattern and Age Distribution of COVID-19 on Pulmonary Computed Tomography
Open Access
- 1 June 2021
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Bentham Science Publishers Ltd. in Current Medical Imaging
- Vol. 17 (6), 775-780
- https://doi.org/10.2174/1573405616666201223144539
Abstract
Background: COVID-19 has emerged recently and become of global concern. Computed tomography (CT) plays a vital role in the diagnosis. Objectives: To characterize the pulmonary CT changes and distributions of COVID-19 infection in regard to different age groups. Methods: Chest CT scan of 104 symptomatic patients with COVID-19 infection, from 7 Iraqi isolation centers were retrospectively analyzed between March 10th and April 5th, 2020. Patients were sub-classified according to their ages to three groups (young adult:20-39years, middle age:40-59years and old age:60- 90years). Results: The most common findings were ground-glass opacities (GGO) (92.3%, followed by consolidation (27.9%), bronchovascular thickening (15.4%), and crazy-paving (12.5%). Less commonly, there were tree-inbud (6.7%), pulmonary nodules (5.8%), bronchiectasis (3.8%), pleural effusion (1.9%), and cavitation (1%). There were no hallo sign, reversed hallo sign, nor mediastinal lymphadenopathy. Pulmonary changes were unilateral in 16.7% and bilateral in 83.3%, central in 14.6%, peripheral in 57.3%, and diffuse (central and peripheral) in 28.1%. Most cases showed multi-lobar changes (70.8%), while the lower lobe was more commonly involved (17.7%) than middle lobe/lingula (8.3%) and upper lobe (3.1%). In unilateral involvement, changes were more on the right (68.8%) than left (31.2%) side. Compared with middle and old age groups, young adult patients showed significantly lesser frequency of consolidation (17% vs. 13.3% and 37%), diffuse changes 28.1% (14.2% vs. 35.3% and 40.5%), bilateral disease (71.4% vs. 94.1% and 85.2%), and multi-lobar involvement (51.4% vs. 82.4% and 81.4%) respectively. Conclusion: Bilateral and peripheral GGO were the most frequent findings with the right side and lower lobar predilection. Extent and pattern seem to be age-related.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Wave-CAIPI susceptibility-weighted imaging achieves diagnostic performance comparable to conventional susceptibility-weighted imaging in half the scan timeEuropean Radiology, 2020
- Radiographic and CT Features of Viral PneumoniaRadioGraphics, 2018
- Acute Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus: Temporal Lung Changes Observed on the Chest Radiographs of 55 PatientsAmerican Journal of Roentgenology, 2015
- CT Correlation With Outcomes in 15 Patients With Acute Middle East Respiratory Syndrome CoronavirusAmerican Journal of Roentgenology, 2015
- Age-associated inflammation connects RAS-induced senescence to stem cell dysfunction and epidermal malignancyCell Death & Differentiation, 2015
- T-cell aging in rheumatoid arthritisCurrent Opinion in Rheumatology, 2014
- Impact of aging on antigen presentation cell function of dendritic cellsCurrent Opinion in Immunology, 2013
- Sarcopenia, obesity, and natural killer cell immune senescence in aging: Altered cytokine levels as a common mechanismAging, 2012
- Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome: Temporal Lung Changes at Thin-Section CT in 30 PatientsRadiology, 2004
- High-Resolution CT Findings of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome at Presentation and After AdmissionAmerican Journal of Roentgenology, 2004