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- Title
Clinical and imaging features of pediatric COVID-19.
- Authors
Zhang, Yu; Xie, Ru-Ming; He, Yu-Lin; Xing, Li-Hong; Dong, Li; Zhang, Jian-Zhong; Xing, Wei-Hong; Lv, Xiao-Yan; Lu, Yi-Bo; Liu, Qiang; Lin, Ling-Bo; Liu, Gui-Zeng; Li, Li; Li, Pan; Xie, Yuan-Zhong; Ni, Zhi-Yu; Yin, Xiao-Ping; Li, Hong-Jun; Gao, Bu-Lang
- Abstract
Background: Pediatric COVID-19 is relatively mild and may vary from that in adults. This study was to investigate the epidemic, clinical, and imaging features of pediatric COVID-19 pneumonia for early diagnosis and treatment. Methods: Forty-one children infected with COVID-19 were analyzed in the epidemic, clinical and imaging data. Results: Among 30 children with mild COVID-19, seven had no symptoms, fifteen had low or mediate fever, and eight presented with cough, nasal congestion, diarrhea, headache, or fatigue. Among eleven children with moderate COVID-19, nine presented with low or mediate fever, accompanied with cough and runny nose, and two had no symptoms. Significantly (P < 0.05) more children had a greater rate of cough in moderate than in mild COVID-19. Thirty children with mild COVID-19 were negative in pulmonary CT imaging, whereas eleven children with moderate COVID-19 had pulmonary lesions, including ground glass opacity in ten (90.9%), patches of high density in six (54.5%), consolidation in three (27.3%), and enlarged bronchovascular bundles in seven (63.6%). The lesions were distributed along the bronchus in five patients (45.5%). The lymph nodes were enlarged in the pulmonary hilum in two patients (18.2%). The lesions were presented in the right upper lobe in two patients (18.1%), right middle lobe in one (9.1%), right lower lobe in six (54.5%), left upper lobe in five (45.5%), and left lower lobe in eight (72.7%). Conclusions: Children with COVID-19 have mild or moderate clinical and imaging presentations. A better understanding of the clinical and CT imaging helps ascertaining those with negative nucleic acid and reducing misdiagnosis rate for those with atypical and concealed symptoms.
- Subjects
ITALY; COUGH; DIARRHEA; FATIGUE (Physiology); HEADACHE; NUCLEIC acids; COVID-19; COVID-19 pandemic; CHILDREN
- Publication
Italian Journal of Pediatrics, 2020, Vol 46, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
1720-8424
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1186/s13052-020-00917-1