01 آذر 1403
logo

مرکز تحقیقات رادیولوژی نوین و تهاجمی

دانشگاه علوم پزشکی تهران

  • تاریخ انتشار : 1403/04/27 - 08:08
  • تعداد بازدید : 26
  • زمان مطالعه : 1 دقیقه

Predictors of The Chest CT Score in COVID-19 Patients: A Cross-Sectional Study

 {faces}

Background

Since the COVID-19 outbreak, pulmonary involvement was one of the most significant concerns in assessing patients. In the current study, we evaluated patient’s signs, symptoms, and laboratory data on the first visit to predict the severity of pulmonary involvement and their outcome regarding their initial findings.

Methods

All referred patients to the COVID-19 clinic of a tertiary referral university hospital were evaluated from April to August 2020. Four hundred seventy-eight COVID-19 patients with positive real-time reverse-transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) or highly suggestive symptoms with computed tomography (CT) imaging results with typical findings of COVID-19 were enrolled in the study. The clinical features, initial laboratory, CT findings, and short-term outcomes (ICU admission, mortality, length of hospitalization, and recovery time) were recorded. In addition, the severity of pulmonary involvement was assessed using a semi-quantitative scoring system (0–25).

Results

Among 478 participants in this study, 353 (73.6%) were admitted to the hospital, and 42 (8.7%) patients were admitted to the ICU. Myalgia (60.4%), fever (59.4%), and dyspnea (57.9%) were the most common symptoms of participants at the first visit. A review of chest CT scans showed that Ground Glass Opacity (GGO) (58.5%) and consolidation (20.7%) were the most patterns of lung lesions. Among initial clinical and laboratory findings, anosmia (P = 0.01), respiratory rate (RR) with a cut point of 25 (P = 0.001), C-reactive protein (CRP) with a cut point of 90 (P = 0.002), white Blood Cell (WBC) with a cut point of 10,000 (P = 0.009), and SpO2 with a cut point of 93 (P = 0.04) was associated with higher chest CT score. Lung involvement and consolidation lesions on chest CT scans were also associated with a more extended hospitalization and recovery period.

Conclusions

Initial assessment of COVID-19 patients, including symptoms, vital signs, and routine laboratory tests, can predict the severity of lung involvement and unfavorable outcomes.

  • Article_DOI : 10.1186/s12985-021-01699-6
  • نویسندگان : niloofar ayoobi yazdi,mohammad-mehdi mehrabinejad ,zahra ahmadinejad,fatemeh jafari,sirous jafari,malihe hasannezad,mohsen meidani,seyed ali dehghan manshadi, abdolkarim haji ghadery,seyed ahmad seyedalinaghi,hamid emadi koochak, mohammadreza salehi,mahboubeh hajiabdolbaghi,hossein khalili, ladan abbasian
  • گروه خبر : پژوهش,مقالات,research article
  • کد خبر : 271420
کلمات کلیدی
مدیر سایت
تهیه کننده:

مدیر سایت

متن مورد نظر خود را جستجو کنید
تنظیمات پس زمینه