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Erschienen in: Japanese Journal of Radiology 5/2020

31.03.2020 | COVID-19 | Special Report

Ultra-high-resolution computed tomography can demonstrate alveolar collapse in novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pneumonia

verfasst von: Tae Iwasawa, Midori Sato, Takafumi Yamaya, Yozo Sato, Yoshinori Uchida, Hideya Kitamura, Eri Hagiwara, Shigeru Komatsu, Daisuke Utsunomiya, Takashi Ogura

Erschienen in: Japanese Journal of Radiology | Ausgabe 5/2020

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Abstract

Purpose

To review the chest computed tomography (CT) findings on the ultra-high-resolution CT (U-HRCT) in patients with the Novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).

Materials and Methods

In February 2020, six consecutive patients with COVID-19 pneumonia (median age, 69 years) underwent U-HR CT imaging. U-HR-CT has a larger matrix size of 1024 × 1024 thinner slice thickness of 0.25 mm and can demonstrate terminal bronchioles in the normal lungs; as a result, Reid’s secondary lobules and their abnormalities can be identified. The distribution and hallmarks (ground-glass opacity, consolidation with or without architectural distortion, linear opacity, crazy paving) of the lung opacities on U-HRCT were visually evaluated on a 1 K monitor by two experienced reviewers. The CT lung volume was measured, and the ratio of the measured lung volume to the predicted total lung capacity (predTLC) based on sex, age and height was calculated.

Results

All cases showed crazy paving pattern in U-HRCT. In these lesions, the secondary lobules were smaller than those in the un-affected lungs. CT lung volume decreased in two cases comparing predTLC.

Conclusion

U-HRCT can evaluate not only the distribution and hallmarks of COVID-19 pneumonia but also visualize local lung volume loss.
Literatur
Metadaten
Titel
Ultra-high-resolution computed tomography can demonstrate alveolar collapse in novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pneumonia
verfasst von
Tae Iwasawa
Midori Sato
Takafumi Yamaya
Yozo Sato
Yoshinori Uchida
Hideya Kitamura
Eri Hagiwara
Shigeru Komatsu
Daisuke Utsunomiya
Takashi Ogura
Publikationsdatum
31.03.2020
Verlag
Springer Singapore
Erschienen in
Japanese Journal of Radiology / Ausgabe 5/2020
Print ISSN: 1867-1071
Elektronische ISSN: 1867-108X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11604-020-00956-y

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