Selected article for: "bilateral lung involvement and lung involvement"

Author: Qian, Guoqing; Lin, Yuanwei; Chen, Xueqin; Ma, Ada Hoi Yan; Zhang, Xuehui; Li, Guoxiang; Ruan, Xinzhong; Ruan, Liemin
Title: Early clinical and CT features of COVID-19 and community-acquired pneumonia from a fever observation ward in Ningbo, China.
  • Cord-id: zkh7mt8f
  • Document date: 2021_1_21
  • ID: zkh7mt8f
    Snippet: INTRODUCTION We aimed to compare the early clinical manifestations, laboratory results and chest computed tomography (CT) images of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients with those of other community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) patients to differentiate COVID-19 before reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction results are obtained. METHODS The clinical and laboratory data and chest CT images of 51 patients were assessed in a fever observation ward for evidence of COVID-19 between Janua
    Document: INTRODUCTION We aimed to compare the early clinical manifestations, laboratory results and chest computed tomography (CT) images of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients with those of other community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) patients to differentiate COVID-19 before reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction results are obtained. METHODS The clinical and laboratory data and chest CT images of 51 patients were assessed in a fever observation ward for evidence of COVID-19 between January and February 2020. RESULTS 24 patients had laboratory-confirmed COVID-19, whereas 27 individuals had negative results. No statistical difference in clinical features was found between COVID-19 and CAP patients except for diarrhoea. There was a significant difference in lymphocyte and eosinophil counts between COVID-19 and CAP patients. 22 (91.67%) COVID-19 patients had bilateral involvement and multiple lesions according to their lung CT images; the left lower lobe (87.50%) and right lower lobe (95.83%) were most often affected, and all lesions were located in peripheral zones of the lung. The most common CT feature of COVID-19 was ground-glass opacity, found in 95.83% of patients, compared to 66.67% of CAP patients. CONCLUSION Diarrhoea, lymphocyte counts, eosinophil counts and CT findings (e.g. ground-glass opacity) could help to distinguish COVID-19 from CAP at an early stage of infection, based on findings from our fever observation ward.

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