LIVIVO - The Search Portal for Life Sciences

zur deutschen Oberfläche wechseln
Advanced search

Search results

Result 1 - 1 of total 1

Search options

Article ; Online: Correlation between chest computed tomography findings and pulmonary function test results in the post-recovery phase of COVID-19.

Teles, Gustavo Borges da Silva / Fonseca, Eduardo Kaiser Uruhary Nunes / Capobianco, Julia / Yokoo, Patricia / Rosa, Marcela Emer Egypto / Antunes, Telma / Bernardes, Carolina Silva / Marques, Tatiane Cristina / Chate, Rodrigo Caruso / Szarf, Gilberto

Einstein (Sao Paulo, Brazil)

2023  Volume 21, Page(s) eAO0288

Abstract: Objective: The radiological and functional lung sequelae in COVID-19 survivors remain unclear. We compared the chest computed tomography findings of COVID-19 patients with normal and abnormal pulmonary function test results in the post-recovery phase.!## ...

Abstract Objective: The radiological and functional lung sequelae in COVID-19 survivors remain unclear. We compared the chest computed tomography findings of COVID-19 patients with normal and abnormal pulmonary function test results in the post-recovery phase.
Methods: The data of consecutive patients who underwent pulmonary function tests and chest computed tomography within 14 days after recovery from COVID-19 at two medical centers between May and October 2020 were collected retrospectively. Two thoracic radiologists who were blinded to the clinical information and pulmonary function test results classified the patients according to the computed tomography features, evidence of fibrotic-like changes, and semi-quantitative quantification of the extent of pulmonary abnormalities. The clinical characteristics and computed tomography findings of patients with normal pulmonary function test results were compared with those of patients with abnormal results.
Results: A total of 101 COVID-19 survivors, comprising 48 ambulatory and 53 hospitalized patients, were included at a median of 95 days from initial symptom onset. Computed tomography revealed fibrotic-like changes in 10.9% of patients. A reduction in the diffusion capacity of carbon monoxide was the most common lung function abnormality (19.8%). Abnormal diffusion capacity of carbon monoxide was associated with the presence and extension of lung opacities on chest computed tomography scans and fibrotic pulmonary abnormalities. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of reduced diffusion capacity of carbon monoxide for detecting fibrotic-like pulmonary changes on chest computed tomography scans were 72.7%, 87.8%, and 86.1%, respectively.
Conclusion: Our study suggests that the presence of an abnormal diffusion capacity of carbon monoxide in the post-recovery phase of COVID-19 is associated with a greater risk of long-term parenchymal lung disease, as evidenced by the presence of fibrotic-like changes on chest computed tomography scans, such as traction bronchiectasis and architectural distortion.
MeSH term(s) Humans ; Retrospective Studies ; Carbon Monoxide ; COVID-19/diagnostic imaging ; Lung/diagnostic imaging ; Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods ; Respiratory Function Tests
Chemical Substances Carbon Monoxide (7U1EE4V452)
Language English
Publishing date 2023-12-22
Publishing country Brazil
Document type Journal Article
ZDB-ID 2418293-X
ISSN 2317-6385 ; 2317-6385
ISSN (online) 2317-6385
ISSN 2317-6385
DOI 10.31744/einstein_journal/2023AO0288
Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

More links

Kategorien

To top