Author: Allinovi, Marco; Laudicina, Selene; Dallari, Lorenzo; Gianassi, Iacopo; Dervishi, Egrina; Biagini, Maria; Cirami, Lino
Title: Lung ultrasound may help in the differential diagnosis of suspected oligosymptomatic COVIDâ€19 patients on hemodialysis: A case report Cord-id: n0dbwld0 Document date: 2021_6_24
ID: n0dbwld0
Snippet: INTRODUCTION: Considering that patients on dialysis showed a poor outcome during COVIDâ€19 pandemic, and that COVIDâ€19 symptoms in dialysis patients are often mild or absent, each dialysis unit should implement local strategies to early recognize patients affected by COVIDâ€19. However, many available SARSâ€CoVâ€2 diagnostic tests demonstrated a moderate sensitivity, 70%–80% is probably a reasonable estimate. Consequently, having useful tools for differential diagnosis becomes essential.
Document: INTRODUCTION: Considering that patients on dialysis showed a poor outcome during COVIDâ€19 pandemic, and that COVIDâ€19 symptoms in dialysis patients are often mild or absent, each dialysis unit should implement local strategies to early recognize patients affected by COVIDâ€19. However, many available SARSâ€CoVâ€2 diagnostic tests demonstrated a moderate sensitivity, 70%–80% is probably a reasonable estimate. Consequently, having useful tools for differential diagnosis becomes essential. In this scenario, lung ultrasound (LUS) may have an important role in the evaluation of lung involvement in hemodialysis patients during COVIDâ€19 pandemic. METHODS: We present two cases of hemodialysis patients with COVIDâ€19 pneumonia in whom LUS had a central role in the diagnostic process. Ultrasound images of COVIDâ€19 pneumonia show a typical bilateral pattern characterized by multiple or confluent Bâ€lines with spared areas, thickened and irregular pleural line, and rare subpleural consolidations. LUS showed high accuracy in diagnosing COVIDâ€19 pneumonia. FINDINGS: Despite both patients appeared clinically euvolemic and afebrile, they presented with acute diarrhea and oxygen saturation level of 92%–93%. Although clinical manifestations were mild and not specific in both patients, LUS raised suspicion on the possible COVIDâ€19 diagnosis which was confirmed by a positive nasopharyngeal RTâ€PCR. DISCUSSION: There are many reasons for a patient on dialysis to present shortness of breath, fever, and multiple Bâ€lines at LUS assessment (such as heart failure, fluid overload, vascular access infection, interstitial pneumonia) but the recognition of typical ultrasound patterns of the COVIDâ€19 pneumonia is helpful for differential diagnosis. LUS may have an important role in the screening process of hemodialysis patients during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic, especially in oligosymptomatic patients before the SARSâ€CoVâ€2 diagnostic tests, and in those with suspected symptoms and/or known exposure with unexpected negative SARSâ€CoVâ€2 diagnostic tests.
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