Background: Clinically, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is associated with a wide range of symptoms, which can range from mild complaints of an upper respiratory infection to life-threatening hypoxic respiratory insufficiency and multiorgan failure. Objective: The initially identified pulmonary damage patterns, such as diffuse alveolar damage in acute lung failure, are accompanied by new findings that draw a more complex scenario. These include microvascular involvement and a wide range of associated pathologies of multiple organ systems. A back-scaling of microstructural vascular changes is possible via targeted correlation of pathological autopsy results with radiological imaging. Material and methods: Radiological and pathological correlation as well as microradiological imaging to investigate microvascular involvement in fatal COVID-19. Results: The cases of two COVID-19 patients are presented. Patient 1 showed a relative hypoperfusion in lung regions that did not have typical COVID-19 infiltrates; the targeted post-mortem correlation also showed subtle signs of microvascular damage even in these lung sections. Patient 2 showed both radiologically and pathologically advanced typical COVID-19 destruction of lung structures and the case illustrates the damage patterns of the blood-air barrier. The perfusion deficit of the intestinal wall shown in computed tomography of patient 2 could not ultimately clearly be microscopically attributed to intestinal microvascular damage. Conclusion: In addition to microvascular thrombosis, our results indicate a functional pulmonary vasodysregulation as part of the pathophysiology during the vascular phase of COVID-19. The clinical relevance of autopsies and the integration of radiological imaging findings into histopathological injury patterns must be emphasized for a better understanding of COVID-19.
CITATION STYLE
Wagner, W. L., Hellbach, K., Fiedler, M. O., Salg, G. A., Wehrse, E., Ziener, C. H., … Schwab, C. (2020). Mikrovaskuläre Veränderungen bei COVID-19. Der Radiologe, 60(10), 934–942. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00117-020-00743-w
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