Chest CT Findings in Coronavirus Disease-19 (COVID-19): Relationship to Duration of Infection

Adam Bernheim(Mount Sinai Hospital), Xueyan Mei(Mount Sinai Hospital), Mingqian Huang(Mount Sinai Hospital), Yang Yang(Mount Sinai Hospital), Zahi A. Fayad(Mount Sinai Hospital), Ning Zhang(Mount Sinai Hospital), Kaiyue Diao(Mount Sinai Hospital), Bin Lin(Mount Sinai Hospital), Xiqi Zhu(Mount Sinai Hospital), Kunwei Li(Sun Yat-sen University), Shaolin Li(Sun Yat-sen University), Hong Shan(Mount Sinai Hospital), Adam Jacobi(Mount Sinai Hospital), Michael Chung(Mount Sinai Hospital)
Radiology
February 20, 2020
Cited by 2,779Open Access
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Abstract

In this retrospective study, chest CTs of 121 symptomatic patients infected with coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) from four centers in China from January 18, 2020 to February 2, 2020 were reviewed for common CT findings in relationship to the time between symptom onset and the initial CT scan (i.e. early, 0-2 days (36 patients), intermediate 3-5 days (33 patients), late 6-12 days (25 patients)). The hallmarks of COVID-19 infection on imaging were bilateral and peripheral ground-glass and consolidative pulmonary opacities. Notably, 20/36 (56%) of early patients had a normal CT. With a longer time after the onset of symptoms, CT findings were more frequent, including consolidation, bilateral and peripheral disease, greater total lung involvement, linear opacities, "crazy-paving" pattern and the "reverse halo" sign. Bilateral lung involvement was observed in 10/36 early patients (28%), 25/33 intermediate patients (76%), and 22/25 late patients (88%).


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