The Pan African Medical Journal (Dec 2020)

Pulmonary fibrosis secondary to COVID-19

  • Muhammad Saadiq Moolla,
  • Ilhaam Fredericks

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2020.37.323.26263
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 323

Abstract

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While death is the most feared outcome of COVID-19, other serious complications are increasingly being described. A 74-years-old man with hypertension, diabetes mellitus and a Modified Medical Research Council (mMRC) dyspnoea score of 1 was admitted to our institution with a 1-week history of dyspnoea, cough and severe hypoxia. Initial chest radiograph (A) showed bilateral, peripheral, lower lobe-predominant ground glass opacities. A diagnosis of COVID-19 was confirmed with positive SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR on nasal swab. He received oral steroids and therapeutic doses of heparin. He initially required 60% facemask oxygen, which was weaned to nasal prong oxygen over two weeks. Seven weeks after admission and despite normalisation of all inflammatory markers, he remained dyspnoeic at rest and oxygen-dependent.Follow up chest radiograph (B) demonstrated worsening diffuse reticulonodular shadowing. Chest high-resolution computed tomography (C, D) demonstrated confluent pulmonary fibrosis with an apicobasal gradient bilaterally, diffuse peripheral inter- and intra-lobular septal thickening and significant traction bronchiectasis without honeycombing.Total lung capacity and diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide were not performed due to infective risk but are expected to be decreased. The patient was given a trial of steroids and will be followed up in 6 weeks. He will likely require domiciliary oxygen. Due to the mMRC of 1 and short history, it is assumed that the fibrosis was not present prior to the COVID-19 diagnosis. The early use of antifibrotics may prevent this devastating complication, but it is difficult to predict who is likely to progress to pulmonary fibrosis.

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