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Study reveals how chest CT indicates lung abnormalities after two years of Covid

According to a study, chest CT demonstrated residual lung anomalies in patients two years following COVID-19 (RSNA). This is the first study to present two-year follow-up data on the effects of COVID-19 on the lungs.

ANI Feb 14, 2023 22:26 IST googleads

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Chicago [US], February 14 (ANI): According to a study, chest CT demonstrated residual lung anomalies in patients two years following COVID-19 (RSNA). This is the first study to present two-year follow-up data on the effects of coronavirus on the lungs.
The findings of the study were published in Radiology, a journal of the Radiological Society of North America.
Globally, more than 600 million people have recovered from COVID-19, but concerns remain that some organs, especially the lungs, may suffer long-term damage after infection.
Qing Ye, MD, and Heshui Shi, MD, PhD from Tongji Medical College of Huazhong University of Science and Technology in Wuhan, China, and colleagues set out to assess residual lung abnormalities in patients up to two years post-COVID-19 pneumonia. They also looked at the correlation between residual lung abnormalities and changes in lung function.
In this prospective study, 144 patients (79 men and 65 women, median age 60) discharged from the hospital after SARSCoV-2 infection between January 15 and March 10, 2020, were included. Three serial chest CT scans and pulmonary function tests were obtained at six months, 12 months and two years after symptom onset.
Residual lung abnormalities after discharge from the hospital included fibrosis (scarring), thickening, honeycombing, cystic changes, dilation of the bronchi, and more.
Over two years, the incidence of lung abnormalities gradually decreased. At six months, 54% of patients showed lung abnormalities. On two-year follow-up CT scans, 39% (56/144) of the patients had lung abnormalities, including 23 per cent (33/144) with fibrotic lung abnormalities and 16% (23/144) with non-fibrotic lung abnormalities.
"In particular, the proportion of fibrotic interstitial lung abnormalities, an important precursor to idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, remained stable throughout follow-up," the authors said. "Therefore, the fibrotic abnormalities observed in our study might represent a stable, irreversible pulmonary condition, such as lung fibrosis, after COVID-19."
The remaining 88 cases (61 per cent) showed no abnormalities.
Patients with lung abnormalities on CT were more likely to have respiratory symptoms and abnormal lung function. The proportion of individuals with respiratory symptoms decreased from 30% at six months to 22% at two years.
At two-year follow-up, the most common respiratory symptom was exertional dyspnea or shortness of breath (14% [20/144]), while mild and moderate pulmonary diffusion--which refers to how well the air sacs in the lungs are delivering oxygen to and removing carbon dioxide from the blood in the tiny blood vessels that surround them--were observed in 29 per cent (38/129) of patients. Pulmonary diffusion was regarded as abnormal when diffusing capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide was less than 75% of the predicted value. The researchers suggest that persisting residual symptoms and abnormal lung function could be related to the patient's ongoing lung damage.
"Long-term and functional consequences of chest CT findings post-COVID-19 are largely unknown," the authors said. "Our prospective study found that 39 per cent of participants had persistent interstitial lung abnormalities at two-year follow-up, which were associated with respiratory symptoms and decreased diffusion function." (ANI)

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