Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/17618
Title: MASSIVE PULMONARY FIBROSIS AFTER SEVERE BILATERAL PNEUMONIA AS POST COVID-19 COMPLICATION
Authors: Zafirova Ivanovska, Beti 
Stojkovic, Jagoda 
Keywords: COVID-19
bilateral pneumonia
massive pulmonary fibrosis
Issue Date: 29-Dec-2021
Publisher: Macedonian Association of Anatomists
Source: IVANOVSKA, Beti Zafirova; STOJKOVIKJ, Jagoda. MASSIVE PULMONARY FIBROSIS AFTER SEVERE BILATERAL PNEUMONIA AS POST COVID-19 COMPLICATION. Journal of Morphological Sciences, [S.l.], v. 4, n. 3, p. 144-148, dec. 2021. ISSN 2545-4706.
Journal: Journal of Morphological Sciences
Abstract: A large number of hospitalized COVID-19 survivors show that persistent symptoms, radiographic abnormalities and physiological impairments exist months after the initial illness. Persistent chest imaging abnormalities and histopathological findings of lung fibrosis were also found in a majority of survivors of the SARS-CoV-1 suggesting that the SARS viruses may lead to a worse fibroproliferative response than other pneumonia. Our patient had a severe COVID-19 pneumonia, followed by massive infiltrative changes in both lungs in addition to massive pulmonary fibrosis. After the initial treatment in one of the COVID-19 centers in the Clinical Center in Skopje, the patient with post-COVID-19 (more precisely pulmonary fibrous changes of the lungs) was referred for further treatment to the University Clinic for Pulmonology in a severe clinical condition, where he was treated at an outpatient basis in the period of several months. During that time the condition improved, with a significant withdrawal of the X-ray finding of the lungs, which was registered on CT from 5.5.2021. He is still under observation. The robust responses of corticosteroid therapy in our case presenting a radiological pattern of organizing pneumonia allowed the patient to return to his baseline clinical condition. But due to the persistence of X-ray residual changes he is under our regular observation.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/17618
ISSN: 2545-4706
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Medicine: Journal Articles

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