Clinical and CT imaging features of the COVID-19 pneumonia: Focus on pregnant women and children
Date
2020Author
Liu, Huanhuan
Liu, Fang
Li, Jinning
Zhang, Tingting
Wang, Dengbin
Lan, Weishun
Metadata
Show full item record
Documentos PDF
Abstract
Background: The ongoing outbreak of COVID-19 pneumonia is globally concerning. We aimed to investigate the clinical and CT features in the pregnant women and children with this disease, which have not
been well reported.
Methods: Clinical and CT data of 59 patients with COVID-19 from January 27 to February 14, 2020 were
retrospectively reviewed, including 14 laboratory-confirmed non-pregnant adults, 16 laboratory-confirmed
and 25 clinically-diagnosed pregnant women, and 4 laboratory-confirmed children. The clinical and CT
features were analyzed and compared.
Findings: Compared with the non-pregnant adults group (n = 14), initial normal body temperature (9
[56%] and 16 [64%]), leukocytosis (8 [50%] and 9 [36%]) and elevated neutrophil ratio (14 [88%] and 20
[80%]), and lymphopenia (9 [56%] and 16 [64%]) were more common in the laboratory-confirmed (n = 16)
and clinically-diagnosed (n = 25) pregnant groups. Totally 614 lesions were detected with predominantly
peripheral and bilateral distributions in 54 (98%) and 37 (67%) patients, respectively. Pure ground-glass
opacity (GGO) was the predominant presence in 94/131 (72%) lesions for the non-pregnant adults. Mixed
consolidation and complete consolidation were more common in the laboratory-confirmed (70/161 [43%])
and clinically-diagnosed (153/322 [48%]) pregnant groups than 37/131 (28%) in the non-pregnant adults
(P = 0·007, P < 0·001). GGO with reticulation was less common in 9/161 (6%) and 16/322 (5%) lesions for
the two pregnant groups than 24/131 (18%) for the non-pregnant adults (P = 0·001, P < 0·001). The pulmonary involvement in children with COVID-19 was mild with a focal GGO or consolidation. Twentythree patients underwent follow-up CT, revealing progression in 9/13 (69%) at 3 days whereas improvement in 8/10 (80%) at 6–9 days after initial CT scans.
Interpretation: Atypical clinical findings of pregnant women with COVID-19 could increase the difficulty
in initial identification. Consolidation was more common in the pregnant groups. The clinically-diagnosed
cases were vulnerable to more pulmonary involvement. CT was the modality of choice for early detection,
severity assessment, and timely therapeutic effects evaluation for the cases with epidemic and clinical
features of COVID-19 with or without laboratory confirmation. The exposure history and clinical symptoms were more helpful for screening in children versus chest CT.
Link to resource
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinf.2020.03.007Collections
Estadísticas Google Analytics
Comments
Respuesta Comentario Repositorio Expeditio
Gracias por tomarse el tiempo para darnos su opinión.