Utility and Limits of Lung Ultrasound in Childhood Pulmonary Tuberculosis: Lessons from a Case Series and Literature Review.
Rosa MorelloCristina De RoseVittoria FerrariPiero ValentiniAnna Maria MusolinoDaniele Guerino BiasucciVetrugno LuigiDaniele Antonio PizzutoPublished in: Journal of clinical medicine (2022)
Childhood pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) diagnosis is often a challenge that requires a combination of history, clinical, radiological, immunological and microbiological findings. Radiological diagnosis is based today on the use of chest X-ray and chest CT that, in addition to being radio-invasive tools for children, are often not available in countries with low-resources. A non-invasive, easily usable and reproducible, low-cost diagnostic tool as LUS would therefore be useful to use to support the diagnosis of childhood PTB. Data on the use of LUS for the diagnosis and follow-up of childhood PTB are limited and in some respects contradictory. To help better define the potential role of LUS we have described the pros and cons of lung ultrasound method through a brief review of the studies in the literature and reporting some case series in which we describe clinical, laboratory, radiological results as well as detailed lung ultrasound findings of four children/adolescents with PTB.
Keyphrases
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- young adults
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- magnetic resonance imaging
- low cost
- childhood cancer
- early life
- systematic review
- emergency department
- computed tomography
- high resolution
- case report
- risk assessment
- magnetic resonance
- electronic health record
- climate change
- image quality
- deep learning
- adverse drug