
COVID-2019 Pneumonia
Author(s) -
Rashid Al Umairi,
Ishaq Al Salmi,
Jokha Al Kalbani,
Atheel Kamona,
Saqar Al Tai,
Faiza Al Kindi,
Sachin Jose,
Faryal Khamis,
Huda Al Khalili,
Mohammed Al Busaidi
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
sultan qaboos university medical journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.258
H-Index - 27
eISSN - 2075-0528
pISSN - 2075-051X
DOI - 10.18295/squmj.4.2021.061
Subject(s) - medicine , radiography , chest radiograph , covid-19 , pneumonia , radiological weapon , lung , retrospective cohort study , ground glass opacity , radiology , surgery , disease , infectious disease (medical specialty) , adenocarcinoma , cancer
Objectives: This study aimed to assess the correlation between the severity of the initial chest x-ray (CXR) abnormalities in patients with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 and the final outcomes. Methods: This retrospective study was conducted at the Royal Hospital, Oman between mid-March and May 2020 and included patients who had been admitted with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 and had a final outcome. Serial CXRs were identified and examined for presence, extent, distribution and progression pattern of radiological abnormalities. Each lung field was divided into three zones on each CXR and a score was allocated for each zone (0 is normal and 1–4 is mild–severe). The scores for all six zones per CXR examination were summed to provide a cumulative chest radiographic score (range: 0–24). Results: A total of 64 patients were included; the majority were male (89.1%) and the mean age was 50.22 ± 14.86 years. The initial CXR was abnormal in 60 patients (93.8%). The most common finding was ground glass opacity (n = 58, 96.7%) followed by consolidation (n = 50, 83.3%). Most patients had bilateral (n = 51, 85.0%), multifocal (n = 57, 95.0%) and mixed central and peripheral (n = 36, 60.0%) lung abnormalities. The median score of initial CXR for deceased patients was significantly higher than recovered patients (17 versus 11; P = 0.009). Five CXR evolution patterns were identified: type I (initial radiograph deteriorates then improves), type II (fluctuate), type III (static), type IV (progressive deterioration) and type V (progressive improvement). Conclusion: A higher baseline CXR score is associated with higher mortality rate and poor prognosis in those with COVID-19 pneumonia.Keywords: SARS-CoV-2; COVID-19; X-ray Film; Pneumonia; Prognosis; Oman.