The COVID-19 pandemic has left many survivors with persistent respiratory symptoms such as dyspnea, chronic cough, and reduced exercise capacity. Fibrosis-like abnormalities on high-resolution CT are frequently reported in theses patient. This study aimed to describe the morphological pulmonary abnormalities identified on V/Q SPECT/CT after COVID-19 infection and to evaluate their functional consequences on regional ventilation and perfusion. We also sought to identify clinical predictors of abnormal V/Q SPECT/CT findings. This retrospective multicenter study was based on a national registry of patients referred for V/Q SPECT/CT because of persistent respiratory symptoms after COVID-19 infection. CT abnormalities were characterized using standard radiological criteria. Ventilation and perfusion were visually graded using a five-point scale. Clinical, demographic, and acute COVID-19 characteristics were analyzed to identify predictors of abnormal imaging. Among the 217 included patients (mean age 58 ± 15 years), 122 (56%) presented pulmonary abnormalities on V/Q SPECT or CT. The most frequent parenchymal abnormalities were reticulations, consolidations, atelectasis, emphysema, and ground-glass opacities. Emphysema, consolidations, and fibrosis were associated with the most severe impairments of both ventilation and perfusion. Age and pre-existing chronic lung disease were the strongest predictors of abnormal imaging, while a mild acute COVID-19 course without oxygen therapy was protective. V/Q SPECT/CT provides a comprehensive structural and functional assessment of long COVID pulmonary sequelae. It allows the differentiation between reversible inflammatory lesions and persistent structural abnormalities with lasting functional consequences.
Bonnefoy et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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