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About:
Lung ultrasound may support diagnosis and monitoring of COVID-19 pneumonia
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An Entity of Type :
schema:ScholarlyArticle
, within Data Space :
covidontheweb.inria.fr
associated with source
document(s)
Type:
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
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type
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
isDefinedBy
Covid-on-the-Web dataset
title
Lung ultrasound may support diagnosis and monitoring of COVID-19 pneumonia
Creator
Alberto, Parise
Andrea, Amerio
Andrea, Franci
Angelo, Mangia
Anna, Odone
Davide, Delmonte
Fabrizio, Gigliotti
Marco, Allinovi
Marco, Delsante
Martina, Giacalone
Niccolò, Parri
Silvia, Amadasi
Nephrology,
source
Medline; PMC
abstract
The Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) disease (COVID-19) is characterized by a severe pneumonia and/or acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in about 20% of infected patients. Computed tomography (CT) is the routine imaging technique for diagnosis and monitoring of COVID-19 pneumonia. Chest CT has high sensitivity for diagnosis of COVID-19, but is not universally available, requires infected or unstable patient to be moved to the Radiology unit with potential exposure of several people, CT room needs proper sanification after use, and is underutilized in children and pregnant women for radioexposition concerns. The increasing frequency of confirmed COVID-19 cases is striking, and new sensitive diagnostic tools are needed to guide clinical practice. Lung ultrasound (LUS) is a non-invasive, bedside and emerging technique for the diagnosis of interstitial lung syndrome by evaluating and quantifying the number of B-lines, pleural irregularities and nodules or consolidations. In patients with COVID-19 pneumonia, LUS shows a typical pattern of diffuse interstitial lung syndrome, characterized by multiple or confluent bilateral B-lines with spared areas, thickening of the pleural line with pleural line irregularity, and peripheral consolidations. LUS showed to be a promising tool for the diagnosis of COVID-19 pneumonia, and LUS findings fairly correlate with chest CT scan. Compared to CT, LUS have several other advantages, such as preventing exposure to radiation, bedside repeatability during follow-up, low-cost and easier application in low-resource settings. Consequently, LUS may decrease utilization of conventional diagnostic imaging resources (CT scan and chest X-ray). LUS may help for early diagnosis, therapeutic decisions and follow-up monitoring of COVID-19 pneumonia, particularly in critical care setting, pregnant women, children and patients in areas with high rates of community transmission.
has issue date
2020-07-20
(
xsd:dateTime
)
bibo:doi
10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2020.07.018
bibo:pmid
32807570
has license
no-cc
sha1sum (hex)
6b447bbdefe5822cfb0aa6b09dd533f25bb93113
schema:url
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2020.07.018
resource representing a document's title
Lung ultrasound may support diagnosis and monitoring of COVID-19 pneumonia
has PubMed Central identifier
PMC7369598
has PubMed identifier
32807570
schema:publication
Ultrasound Med Biol
resource representing a document's body
covid:6b447bbdefe5822cfb0aa6b09dd533f25bb93113#body_text
is
schema:about
of
named entity 'The'
named entity 'cases'
named entity 'pleural'
named entity 'bilateral'
named entity 'IS A'
named entity 'RADIOLOGY UNIT'
named entity 'COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY'
named entity 'AREAS'
named entity 'B-LINES'
named entity 'sensitive'
named entity 'patients'
named entity 'frequency'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'pleural'
named entity 'lung'
named entity 'typical'
named entity 'proper'
named entity 'imaging'
named entity 'pneumonia'
named entity 'thickening'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'confluent'
named entity 'bedside'
named entity 'tool'
named entity 'Lung'
named entity 'Computed tomography'
named entity 'Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2'
named entity 'pneumonia'
named entity 'acute respiratory distress syndrome'
named entity 'SARS-CoV-2'
named entity 'Lung ultrasound'
named entity 'COVID'
named entity 'severe'
named entity 'heart failure'
named entity 'intercostal space'
named entity 'Emergency Department'
named entity 'COVID'
named entity 'pregnant woman'
named entity 'etiologies'
named entity 'pregnant women'
named entity 'follow-up'
named entity 'COVID'
named entity 'pneumonia'
named entity 'chest CT scan'
named entity 'mechanical ventilation'
named entity 'follow-up'
named entity 'pregnant women'
named entity 'triage'
named entity 'asymptomatic'
named entity 'weaning'
named entity 'institutional review board'
named entity 'Nursing homes'
named entity 'pregnant women'
named entity 'sedation'
named entity 'diagnostic imaging'
named entity 'fever'
named entity 'CT scan'
named entity 'Intensive Care'
named entity 'General Internal Medicine'
named entity 'COVID'
named entity 'COVID'
named entity 'hemodialysis'
named entity 'CT scan'
named entity 'Chest CT'
named entity 'immunosuppressive'
named entity 'subpleural'
named entity 'COVID-19'
named entity 'asymptomatic'
named entity 'lung consolidation'
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