Journal of Clinical Medicine (May 2022)

Lung Aeration in COVID-19 Pneumonia by Ultrasonography and Computed Tomography

  • Alexandros Kalkanis,
  • Christophe Schepers,
  • Zafeiris Louvaris,
  • Laurent Godinas,
  • Els Wauters,
  • Dries Testelmans,
  • Natalie Lorent,
  • Pierre Van Mol,
  • Joost Wauters,
  • Walter De Wever,
  • Christophe Dooms

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11102718
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. 2718

Abstract

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We conducted a prospective single-center observational study to determine lung ultrasound reliability in assessing global lung aeration in 38 hospitalized patients with non-critical COVID-19. On admission, fixed chest CT scans using visual (CTv) and software-based (CTs) analyses along with lung ultrasound imaging protocols and scoring systems were applied. The primary endpoint was the correlation between global chest CTs score and global lung ultrasound score. The secondary endpoint was the association between radiographic features and clinical disease classification or laboratory indices of inflammation. Bland–Altman analysis between chest CT scores obtained visually (CTv) or using software (CTs) indicated that only 1 of the 38 paired measures was outside the 95% limits of agreement (−4 to +4 score). Global lung ultrasound score was highly and positively correlated with global software-based CTs score (r = 0.74, CI = 0.55–0.86; p p = 0.01) and lung ultrasound score (p = 0.02) were found in severe compared to moderate COVID-19. Furthermore, we identified significantly lower (p 2 58 mg/L. We concluded that lung ultrasound is a reliable bedside clinical tool to assess global lung aeration in hospitalized non-critical care patients with COVID-19 pneumonia.

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