The Role of Chest X-Ray in Monitoring Lung Changes among COVID-19 Patients in Gaza Strip

Mousa, Mahmoud and Matar, Marwan and Ajerami, Yasser Al and Naijm, Ahmad and Shab, Khalid Abu and Jaber, Sadi and SJaber, Fouad and Dawoud, Hazem (2021) The Role of Chest X-Ray in Monitoring Lung Changes among COVID-19 Patients in Gaza Strip. Open Journal of Medical Imaging, 11 (02). pp. 29-47. ISSN 2164-2788

[thumbnail of paperinformation.aspx_paperid=108742] Text
paperinformation.aspx_paperid=108742 - Published Version

Download (145kB)

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the time course and findings severity of COVID-19 infection at chest radiography based on a 6-point radiological severity score, and correlates these with patients’ age and gender. Methods: This is a retrospective study of COVID-19 patients who were admitted at European Gaza Hospital and evaluated between October 6, 2020, and November 30, 2020. Baseline and serial chest radiographs, up to 4 images per patient, were reviewed and assessed for predominant pattern, side, and location of lung opacity. Utilized a 6-point scoring system, which divides the chest X-ray into 6 zones, to assess chest X-ray changes and correlate them with the severity of infection, age, and gender of patients. Results: The study included 136 COVID-19 patients: (51/136, 37%) were males and (85/136, 62.5%) were females, while age ranged from 7 months to 90 years with a mean age of 41.7 ± (19.5) years. Negative Chest x-rays were more observed than positive images. Ground-glass opacity was the most frequent pattern with a decreasing trend from 1st to 4th chest X-ray (from 33.8% to 3.7%), followed by consolidation (from 16.2% to 2.9%). Also, the commonest pattern of opacity was seen in peripheral areas (27/136, 19.9%), lower zone location (23/136, 16.9%), and bilateral opacity involvement (43/136; 31.6%). No significant correlation was noticed between the patient’s gender, age, and severity score (P > 0.05). Conclusions: The 6-point chest X-ray severity score as a predictive tool in assessing the severity due to provide an assessment of the progression or regression pathway.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM Library Press > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@stmlibrarypress.com
Date Deposited: 24 Mar 2023 07:51
Last Modified: 21 Aug 2024 03:50
URI: http://journal.scienceopenlibraries.com/id/eprint/778

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item