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Published in: BMC Infectious Diseases 1/2020

Open Access 01-12-2020 | COVID-19 | Research article

Dynamic changes in clinical and CT characteristics of COVID-19 cases with different exposure histories: a retrospective study

Authors: Ruili Li, Guangxue Liu, Xiaojie Huang, Cuiyu Jia, Zhenying Xia, Wenyan Song, Xueqin Li, Xing Wang, Hongjun Li

Published in: BMC Infectious Diseases | Issue 1/2020

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Abstract

Background

To assess the dynamic changes in clinical and CT characteristics of COVID-19 patients with different epidemiology histories.

Methods

Fifty-three discharged COVID-19 patients were enrolled at Beijing YouAn Hospital, Capital Medical University, between January 21 and March 10, 2020. Spearman correlation analysis was performed between CT scores and laboratory indicators. Patients were divided into the Wuhan group (lived in or with travel to Wuhan, numbering 30 cases) and non-Wuhan group (close contacts or unknown exposure, totaling 23 cases). The CT and laboratory findings were compared between and within groups during the clinical process.

Results

Fever (88.7%), cough (64.2%), fatigue (34%), and abnormal laboratory indicators, including lymphopenia, reduced albumin, albumin/globulin (A/G), and elevated C-reactive protein (CRP), were mainly observed. Subpleural ground-glass opacities (86.8%) were usually detected at admission. The CT scores were highly correlated with lymphocytes, CRP, albumin, and A/G at initial and follow-ups (all p < 0.05). Four days after admission, most patients (66.7% Wuhan, 47.8% non-Wuhan) showed progression, and the CT scores of Wuhan significantly increased (p = 0.015). Eight days after admission, the vast majority of patients (69.2% Wuhan, 100% non-Wuhan, p = 0.006) presented improvement, and the CT scores of non-Wuhan were significantly lower than Wuhan (p = 0.006). Pneumonia was completely absorbed in most patients 2–4 weeks after discharge.

Conclusions

CT plays a crucial role in the early diagnosis and monitoring of changes in COVID-19. Lymphocytes, CRP, albumin, and A/G are expected to predict disease severity and prognosis. Viral pathogenicity in non-endemic areas may be weaker than core-infected areas. In most patients, lung lesions can disappear around 4 weeks after discharge.
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Literature
12.
go back to reference Pan Y, Guan H, Zhou S, Wang Y, Li Q, Zhu T, et al. Initial CT findings and temporal changes in patients with the novel coronavirus pneumonia (2019-nCoV): a study of 63 patients in Wuhan, China. Eur RadiolPublished online 13 February. 2020. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-020-06731-x. Pan Y, Guan H, Zhou S, Wang Y, Li Q, Zhu T, et al. Initial CT findings and temporal changes in patients with the novel coronavirus pneumonia (2019-nCoV): a study of 63 patients in Wuhan, China. Eur RadiolPublished online 13 February. 2020. https://​doi.​org/​10.​1007/​s00330-020-06731-x.
Metadata
Title
Dynamic changes in clinical and CT characteristics of COVID-19 cases with different exposure histories: a retrospective study
Authors
Ruili Li
Guangxue Liu
Xiaojie Huang
Cuiyu Jia
Zhenying Xia
Wenyan Song
Xueqin Li
Xing Wang
Hongjun Li
Publication date
01-12-2020
Publisher
BioMed Central
Keyword
COVID-19
Published in
BMC Infectious Diseases / Issue 1/2020
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2334
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-020-05306-x

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