1. Medical image of the month and brief review: aspiration pneumonia in an intubated patient with COVID-19
- Author
-
Head JP and Larson MC
- Subjects
covid-19 ,aspiration ,aspiration pneumonia ,ct scan ,bronchial filling ,lobar collapse ,treatment ,diagnosis ,patient positioning ,antibiotic selection ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
No abstract available. Article truncated after 150 words. A woman in her 60’s likely acquired COVID-19 through community transmission. When she developed respiratory distress, she came to the emergency department, was found to have abnormalities on chest x-ray and was intubated, testing positive on COVID-19 PCR. She developed worsening hypoxia over the course of one night after a fairly stable ICU course. CT was obtained and demonstrated severe aspiration changes including bronchial filling and collapse of the dependent lower lobes. Increased attention to suctioning helped with the desaturations, and she eventually recovered and was extubated. This case serves as a reminder to ensure adequate suctioning while patients are intubated to prevent aspiration, obstruction and related ventilator-associated pneumonia. Discussion: Aspiration is a relatively common event which typically resolves with no clinical sequelae. In fact, recent studies have estimated that up to 50% of healthy adults aspirate while in their sleep (1). Pulmonary symptoms of aspiration generally only occur when …
- Published
- 2020