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Chest CT features of children infected by B.1.617.2 (Delta) variant of COVID-19 
 
Chest CT features of children infected by B.1.617.2 (Delta) variant of COVID-19
  Qi-Rui Cheng, Ming-Xing Fan, Jing Hao, Xiao-Chen Hu, Xu-Hua Ge, Zhi-Liang Hu, Zhuo Li
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Background: This study aimed to explore the imaging characteristics, diversity and changing trend in CT scans of pediatric patients infected with Delta-variant strain by studying imaging features of children infected with Delta and comparing the results to those of children with original COVID-19.
Methods: A retrospective, comparative analysis of initial chest CT manifestations between 63 pediatric patients infected with Delta variant in 2021 and 23 pediatric patients with COVID-19 in 2020 was conducted. Corresponding imaging features were analyzed. In addition, the changing trend in imaging features of COVID-19 Delta-variant cases were explored by evaluating the initial and follow-up CT scans.
Results: Among 63 children with Delta-variant COVID-19 in 2021, 34 (53.9%) showed positive chest CT presentation; and their CT score (1.10 ¡À 1.41) was significantly lower than that in 2020 (2.56 ¡À 3.5) (P = 0.0073). Lesion distribution: lung lesions of Delta cases appear mainly in the lower lungs on both sides. Most children had single lobe involvement (18 cases, 52.9%), 14 (41.2%) in the right lung alone, and 14 (41.2%) in both lungs. A majority of Delta cases displayed initially ground glass (23 cases, 67.6%) and nodular shadows (13 cases, 38.2%) in the first CT scan, with few extrapulmonary manifestations. The 34 children with abnormal chest CT for the first time have a total of 92 chest CT examinations. These children showed a statistically significant difference between the 0¨C3 day group and the 4¨C7 day group (P = 0.0392) and a significant difference between the 4¨C7 day group and the more than 8 days group (P = 0.0003).
Conclusions: The early manifestations of COVID-19 in children with abnormal imaging are mostly small subpleural nodular ground glass opacity. The changes on the Delta-variant COVID-19 chest CT were milder than the original strain. The lesions reached a peak on CT in 4¨C7 days and quickly improved and absorbed after a week. Dynamic CT re-examination can achieve a good prognosis.
 
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World Journal of Pediatric Surgery

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