Table 1.
CT Characteristics | Definition |
---|---|
Lobe involvement | Categorized as right upper, right middle, right lower, left upper and left lower lobe involvement |
The lung segment involved | Each lung segment was reviewed for GGO, consolidation and reticular types, respectively |
Lung involvement | Categorized as unilateral or bilateral lung involvement |
Lesion location | Central, lesion located in the interior two-thirds of the lung; peripheral, located in the outer one-third of the lung; Both central and peripheral. |
Extent of lesion involvement | Categorized as focal, multifocal, diffuse |
Predominantly distribution of opacities | Septal/sub-pleural, involving mainly the sub-peripheral one-third of the lung; peri-bronchovasular, surrounding mainly the peri-bronchovascular bundle; random, without predilection for sub-pleural or peri-bronchovascular regions. |
Predominantly CT pattern | GGO pattern, an area of hazy increased lung opacity, within which margins of pulmonary vessels may be indistinct; consolidation pattern, a homogeneous increase in pulmonary parenchymal attenuation that obscures the margins of vessels and airway walls; reticular pattern, a descriptive term usually associated with interstitial lung diseases; mixed pattern, combination of GGO, consolidation, and reticulation. |
Interlobular septal thickening | Smooth or irregular |
Pleural effusion | Fluid in the pleural cavity |
Lymphadenopathy | Arbitrary thresholds for the upper limit of normal of 1 cm in short-axis diameters of mediastinal nodes. |