Copyright
©The Author(s) 2020.
World J Radiol. Nov 28, 2020; 12(11): 261-271
Published online Nov 28, 2020. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v12.i11.261
Published online Nov 28, 2020. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v12.i11.261
Lung ultrasound | Chest X-ray | Chest CT, HCRT | |
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 |
- Citation: D'Andrea A, Radmilovic J, Carbone A, Forni A, Tagliamonte E, Riegler L, Liccardo B, Crescibene F, Sirignano C, Esposito G, Bossone E. Multimodality imaging in COVID-19 patients: A key role from diagnosis to prognosis. World J Radiol 2020; 12(11): 261-271
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1949-8470/full/v12/i11/261.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4329/wjr.v12.i11.261