Author: Hassanipour, Soheil; Azadbakht, Omid; Dehnavi, Zari; Shafiee, Mohsen; Badeenezhad, Ahmad; Nikbakht, Hossein-Ali; Scandarkolaei, Parsa Faghani; Bostan, Hassan
Title: Meta-analysis: COVID-19 diagnosis in chest CT—master key for radiologists Cord-id: eyhgqclx Document date: 2021_3_25
ID: eyhgqclx
Snippet: BACKGROUND: COVID-19 was discovered in February in China. Due to the high prevalence of the disease, early detection and rapid isolation of patients are the vital points for controlling the outbreak. The purpose of this study was to determine the correct location of chest CT scan in the diagnosis of COVID-19. MAIN TEXT: The current study is a systematic review and meta-analysis. 2959 papers were found in all national and international databases. The study has been reported based on the PRISMA ch
Document: BACKGROUND: COVID-19 was discovered in February in China. Due to the high prevalence of the disease, early detection and rapid isolation of patients are the vital points for controlling the outbreak. The purpose of this study was to determine the correct location of chest CT scan in the diagnosis of COVID-19. MAIN TEXT: The current study is a systematic review and meta-analysis. 2959 papers were found in all national and international databases. The study has been reported based on the PRISMA checklist. All analyses were done by CMA Ver. 2 software. The statistical analysis results show that the GGO observation level in the available shape was 46% in CT scan results, and the consolidation observation level in the general form was 33% in CT scan results. Pleural effusion was 7%, and linear opacity observation level was 24% in CT scan results in the general form. The CT scan test sensitivity level was gained 94.7%, and PCR test sensitivity level was achieved as 94.8%. This level was 89% in the early stage. CONCLUSION: The chest CT has about 24% higher diagnostic sensitivity than the PCR test, in the early stage. GGO revealed a declining process and also indicates that GGO is an early symptom of the disease in CT scan. Linear opacity is the reason behind the initial dyspnea in coronavirus suffering patients referring to the medical centers. The extra-pulmonary lesions increase in the last stage of the disease that makes the patient’s worse. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s43055-021-00457-6.
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