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- Jared T Hagaman, Gregory W Rouan, Ralph T Shipley, and Ralph J Panos.
- Departments of Internal Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. hagamajt@ucmail.uc.edu
- Am. J. Med. Sci. 2009 Apr 1;337(4):236-40.
Introduction: The clinical and epidemiological significance of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) with a chest radiograph demonstrating no parenchymal infiltrate has not been studied. We determined the percentage of patients with a clinical diagnosis of CAP who did not have radiographic opacifications and compared this group with patients with CAP and radiographic infiltrates.Methods: Patients admitted with a diagnosis of CAP were identified. Clinical history, physical examination, laboratory studies, and microbiological cultures were reviewed in a random sample of 105 patients. Admission and subsequent chest radiographs were interpreted without knowledge of the clinical data.Results: Twenty-one percent (22/105) of patients with a clinical diagnosis of CAP had negative chest radiographs at presentation. Demographic, clinical, and laboratory data were the same in both groups. Fifty-five percent of patients with initially negative chest radiographs who had follow-up studies developed an infiltrate within 48 hours.Conclusions: In patients admitted with a clinical diagnosis of CAP, the initial chest radiograph lacks sensitivity and may not demonstrate parenchymal opacifications in 21% of patients. Moreover, greater than half of patients admitted with a negative chest radiograph will develop radiographic infiltrates within 48 hours. Further studies are needed to develop evidence-based criteria for the diagnosis of CAP.
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