We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

Features Partner Sites Information LinkXpress hp
Sign In
Advertise with Us

Download Mobile App




Lung Ultrasound Identifies Patients with Coronavirus

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 06 Apr 2020
A new study outlines four brief acquisition protocols for performing lung ultrasonography on patients with COVID-19.

The protocols, developed at the University of Pavia (Italy), Valle del Serchio General Hospital (Lucca, Italy), the University of Trento (Italy), and other institutions outline the best probe to use, where clinicians should look for artifacts, where to set the focus, and how to visualize the widest surface possible with one scan. The protocols are based on finding that COVID-19 patients develop thickened pleura, B-lines, subpleural consolidations, and other hallmark lung ultrasound artifacts.

The four acquisition protocols include the following recommendations:
• Use of linear probes, as these can best capture the detail of pleural and subpleural artifacts; convex probes are also appropriate.
• Using a single focal point modality at the pleural line, instead of focusing at multiple locations.
• Scans should preferably be performed in intercostal spaces, as opposed to an orthogonal view of the ribs. This enables clinicians to see the widest surface possible with one scan.
• Artifacts should be looked for in multiple areas and bilaterally to see the extent of the affected lung surface, specifically in the apical, medial, and basal sections of the anterior midclavicular and posterior paraspinal sections, and in the apical and basal lateral axillary areas.

The study was published on March 20, 2020, in the Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine.

“Lung ultrasound can be used for triaging patients before hospital admission, monitoring emergency department patients with pneumonia, managing ventilation and weaning for intensive care unit patients, and evaluating the effects of antiviral medications,” concluded lead author Gino Soldati MD, of the ultrasound unit at Valle del Serchio General Hospital, and colleagues. “This is because ultrasound can identify changes in the ratio between air, tissue, and fluid in the lungs of patients with COVID-19.”

While CT has excellent ability to detect COVID-19, the modality can't be used at patients' bedsides and it puts additional medical staff at risk for virus exposure. As a result, some doctors in China, Spain, and Italy have turned to lung ultrasound as an alternative imaging modality.

Related Links:
University of Pavia
University of Trento


Multi-Use Ultrasound Table
Clinton
Diagnostic Ultrasound System
DC-80A
Computed Tomography System
Aquilion ONE / INSIGHT Edition
Digital Color Doppler Ultrasound System
MS22Plus

Channels

General/Advanced Imaging

view channel
CT and fused SPECT-CT images L to R of representative healthy control, pulmonary fibrosis participant & hypersensitivity pneumonitis participant (Image courtesy of SNMMI)

New SPECT/CT Method Differentiates Inflammation from Fibrosis in Interstitial Lung Disease

Interstitial lung disease (ILD) encompasses more than 200 disorders that inflame or scar the lung interstitium and can lead to progressive respiratory failure. Determining whether active inflammation is... Read more

Imaging IT

view channel
Image: Researchers develop a vision-language model trained on large-scale data to generate clinically relevant findings from chest computed tomography images through visual question answering (Ms. Maiko Nagao from Meijo University, Japan)

Interactive AI Tool Supports Explainable Lung Nodule Assessment

Lung cancer is a leading cause of cancer mortality, and timely characterization of pulmonary nodules on chest computed tomography (CT) is essential for directing care. Interpreting nodule morphology demands... Read more

Industry News

view channel
Image: MIM KineticID is 510(k)-pending software for dynamic PET imaging and kinetic modeling, enabling time-based radiotracer analysis for clinical and research decisions (Photo courtesy of GE Healthcare)

GE HealthCare Showcases AI-Enabled Nuclear Medicine Portfolio at SNMMI 2026

Nuclear medicine is expanding rapidly as health systems adopt theranostics and broaden access to radiopharmaceuticals, increasing demand for scalable operations and consistent diagnostic confidence.... Read more
Copyright © 2000-2026 Globetech Media. All rights reserved.