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1.
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-22272644

ABSTRACT

Unlike most other viral pneumonitis, SARS-CoV-2 often causes hyperferritinemia, elevations in D-dimer, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), transaminases, troponin, CRP, and other inflammatory markers. We questioned (1) if the severity of pneumonitis observed on lung ultrasound was associated with hospitalization and (2) could lung ultrasound be used to stratify which children needed blood tests? MethodsWe did a retrospective cross-sectional review of children aged between 14 days and 21 years of age being evaluated for Covid-19 in our pediatric emergency department from 30/November/2019 to 14/August/2021 who had had a point-of-care lung ultrasound. Lung ultrasounds were categorized using a 6-point ordinal scale. We used logistic regression to estimate the adjusted effect of lung ultrasound on hospital admission. We performed ordinary least square regression for the association between lung ultrasound severity and laboratory abnormalities. We adjusted these using propensity score derived inverse probability weighting to account for the non-random decision to obtain laboratory investigations. ResultsWe identified 500 point-of-care lung ultrasounds of which 427 could be assigned a severity category. Increasing lung ultrasound severity was associated with increased hospital admission OR 1.36(95% CI 1.08, 1.72.) Ferritin, LDH, transaminases, and D-dimer, but not CRP or troponin were significantly associated with more than moderately severe lung ultrasounds. D-Dimer, CRP, and troponin were sometimes elevated even when lung ultrasound was normal. ConclusionSeverity of pneumonitis was associated with hospital admission. Ferritin, LDH, transaminases, and D-dimer were increased in more than moderately severe pneumonitis but lung ultrasound did not predict elevation of other markers.

2.
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-20123836

ABSTRACT

BackgroundCoVid-19 can be a life-threatening lung disease or a trivial upper respiratory infection depending on whether the alveoli are involved. Emergency department (ED) screening in symptomatic patients with normal vital signs is frequently limited to oro-nasopharyngeal swabs. We tested the null hypothesis that patients being screened for CoVid-19 in the ED with normal vital signs and without hypoxia would have a point-of-care lung ultrasound (LUS) consistent with CoVid-19 less than 2% of the time. MethodsO_ST_ABSSubjectsC_ST_ABSSubjects were identified from ED ultrasound logs. Inclusion criteriaAge 14 years or older with symptoms prompting ED screening for CoVid-19. Exclusion criteriaKnown congestive heart failure or other chronic lung condition likely to cause excessive B lines on LUS. InterventionStructured blinded ultrasound review and chart review AnalysisWe used a two-sided exact hypothesis test for binomial random variables. We also measured LUS diagnostic performance using computed tomography as the gold standard. ResultsWe reviewed 77 charts; 49 met inclusion criteria. Vital signs were normal in 30/49 patients; 10 (33%) of these patients had LUS consistent with CoVid-19. We rejected the null hypothesis (p-value < 0.001). The treating physicians interpretation of their own point of care lung ultrasounds had a sensitivity of 100% (95% CI 75%, 100%) and specificity of 80% (95% CI 68%, 89%). ConclusionLUS has a meaningful detection rate for CoVid-19 in symptomatic ED patients with normal vital signs. We recommend at least LUS be used in addition to PCR testing when screening symptomatic ED patients for CoVid-19. Capsule What is knownAuscultation and chest x-ray are insufficient to screen for lung involvement when SARS-CoV-2 infection is suspected. Point of care lung ultrasound is widely available, safer, and less resource intensive than CT imaging. What we foundIn symptomatic patients presenting to the ED even those with normal vital signs had point of care lung ultrasound evidence of alveolar level involvement 33%of patients. Point of care lung ultrasound was 100% sensitive and 80% specific compared to CT (reference standard) when evaluating patients for Covid-19. What this addsPoint of care lung ultrasound or similar imaging should performed when screening symptomatic patients in whom SARS-CoV-2 infection is suspected.

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