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The pathological autopsy of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-2019) in China: a review
Author(s) -
Baoyong Zhou,
Wei Zhao,
Ruixi Feng,
Xiaohui Zhang,
Xuemei Li,
Yang Zhou,
Li Peng,
Yixin Li,
Jinyan Zhang,
Jing Luo,
Lingyu Li,
Jingxian Wu,
Changhong Yang,
Meijiao Wang,
Yong Zhao,
Kejian Wang,
YU Hua-rong,
Qiling Peng,
Ning Jiang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
pathogens and disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.983
H-Index - 105
ISSN - 2049-632X
DOI - 10.1093/femspd/ftaa026
Subject(s) - autopsy , pathological , covid-19 , disease , china , epidemiology , coronavirus , medicine , pandemic , pathology , cause of death , infectious disease (medical specialty) , intensive care medicine , outbreak , geography , archaeology
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-2019) that emerged in Wuhan, China, has rapidly spread to many countries across all six WHO regions. However, its pathobiology remains incompletely understood and many efforts are underway to study it worldwide. To clarify its pathogenesis to some extent, it will inevitably require lots of COVID-2019-associated pathological autopsies. Pathologists from all over the world have raised concerns with pathological autopsy relating to COVID-2019. The issue of whether a person died from COVID-2019 infection or not is always an ambiguous problem in some cases, and ongoing epidemiology from China may shed light on it. This review retrospectively summarizes the research status of pathological autopsy for COVID-2019 deaths in China, which will be important for the cause of death, prevention, control and clinical strategies of COVID-2019. Moreover, it points out several challenges at autopsy. We believe pathological studies from China enable to correlate clinical symptoms and pathological features of COVID-2019 for doctors and provide an insight into COVID-2019 disease.

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