Title of article :
COVID‐19 and MERS: Are their Chest X‐ray and Computed Tomography Scanning Signs Related?
Author/Authors :
Ghaderian, Mohammad Department of Medical Physics - School of Medicine - Isfahan University of Medical Sciences , Kiani, Mahboobe Department of Medical Physics - School of Medicine - Isfahan University of Medical Sciences , Shahbazi‐Gahrouei, Sogand Department of Management - Faculty of Humanities - Islamic Azad University Najafabad Branch, Isfahan , Shahbazi‐Gahrouei, Daryoush Department of Medical Physics - School of Medicine - Isfahan University of Medical Sciences , Ghadimi Moghadam, Abdolkarim Pediatric Infectious Ward - Yasuj University of Medical Sciences, Yasuj , Haghani, Masoud Department of Radiology - School of Paramedical Sciences - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran
Abstract :
Background: COVID‐19 is a respiratory infection brought about by SARS‐COV‐2. Most of the
patients contaminated by this pathogen are afflicted by respiratory syndrome with multiple stages
ranging from mild upper respiratory involvement to severe dyspnea and acute respiratory distress
syndrome cases. Keeping in mind the high sensitivity of computed tomography (CT) scan in
detecting abnormalities, it became the number one modality in COVID‐19 diagnosis. A wide
diversity of CT features can be found in COVID‐19 cases, which can be observed before the onset
of clinical signs. The review article is aimed to highlight recent discrepancies in CT‐scan and chest
X‐ray (CXR) characteristics between COVID‐19 and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS).
Method: This review study was performed in the literature from the beginning of COVID‐19 until
the middle of April 2021. For this reason, all relevant works through scientific citation websites such
as Google Scholar, PubMed, and Web of Science have been investigated in the mentioned period.
Results: COVID‐19 was more reproductive than MERS, while MERS was significantly higher in
terms of mortality rate (COVID‐19: 2.3% and MERS: 34.4%). Signs of ground‐glass opacity (GGO),
peripheral consolidation, and GGO accompanying with consolidation are the same signs CXR in
both MERS and COVID‐19. Indeed, fever, cough, headache, and sore throat are the most symptoms
in all studied patients. Conclusion: Both COVID‐19 and MERS have the same imaging signs.
The most similar chest CT findings are GGO, peripheral consolidation, and GGO superimposed
by consolidation in both studied diseases, and no statistical differences were seen among the mean
number of chest CT‐scans in MERS and COVID‐19 cases.
Keywords :
Chest X‐ray , computed tomography scan , COVID‐19 , Middle East Respiratory Syndrome‐CoV , SARS‐coronavirus‐2
Journal title :
Journal of Medical Signals and Sensors (JMSS)