Skip to main content
. 2023 Jan 24;307(2):e222379. doi: 10.1148/radiol.222379

Figure 5:

A 51-year-old man 6 months after COVID-19 infection with shortness of breath. Axial CT pulmonary angiograms obtained with (A) soft-tissue and (B) lung window settings at second acute presentation to the emergency department. There are filling defects within several pulmonary artery branches (solid white arrows), consistent with acute pulmonary emboli. Multifocal patchy and linear ground-glass opacities and consolidation (solid black arrows) are new from 2 weeks prior. New bronchial wall thickening (dashed black arrows) and bilateral small pleural effusions (dashed white arrows). These findings suggest a superimposed acute process.

A 51-year-old man 6 months after COVID-19 infection with shortness of breath. Axial CT pulmonary angiograms obtained with (A) soft-tissue and (B) lung window settings at second acute presentation to the emergency department. There are filling defects within several pulmonary artery branches (solid white arrows), consistent with acute pulmonary emboli. Multifocal patchy and linear ground-glass opacities and consolidation (solid black arrows) are new from 2 weeks prior. New bronchial wall thickening (dashed black arrows) and bilateral small pleural effusions (dashed white arrows). These findings suggest a superimposed acute process.