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. 2021 Jan 10;82(2):261–269. doi: 10.1016/j.jinf.2021.01.003

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Computed tomography (CT) pulmonary angiography: A and B: a 66-year old female patient hospitalized for COVID-19 pneumonia; axial lung tissue setting (A) and soft tissue setting coronal (B) CT image reconstructions showing characteristic COVID-19 pulmonary lesions with ground-glass opacities and consolidations involving both the lung parenchyma in predominantly peripheral distribution (A) and a subsegmental contrast filling defect (white arrow, B). C, D and E: axial CT image reconstructions of a 38-year old male patient who had fever, cough, dyspnea, and left-side chest pain and was admitted with COVID-19 pneumonia; upper lung levels showing patchy ground-glass opacities in the left lung (C), and left lower lung with a triangular subpleural consolidation (D) corresponding to a pulmonary infarction (red arrow) related to the presence of pulmonary thrombus in the left lower lobe, visible in a soft tissue setting (white arrow, E).