Case report

Since December 2019, a cluster of pneumonia cases of unknown etiology has been announced in Wuhan, China, the pathogen of which is a novel coronavirus [1]. It broke out across China in just a week and spread rapidly around the world in a month [2]. WHO has officially named the disease with 2019 Coronavirus disease as COVID-19 [3, 4].

A 34-year-old man presented to the community hospital with 1-day history of chill and fever (38.7 ℃) of unknown cause. Five days ago, he just passed Wuhan high-speed rail station in China on train. Coarse breath sounds of both lungs were heard at auscultation. Laboratory studies showed white blood cell count 5,660,000/mL, lymphocyte cell count 1,150,000/mL, the white blood cell differential count showed 70.6% neutrophils (normal range 40–75%), 0.0% eosinophils (normal range 0.4–8%), and 8.5% monocytes (normal range 3–10%). There were elevated blood levels for hypersensitivity C-reactive protein (23.6 mg/L; normal range 0–5 mg/L), Prothrombin time (13.5 s; normal range 9.0–16.0 s), Activated partial thromboplastin time (40.3 s; normal range 27.0–45.0 s).

But real-time fluorescence polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) of the patient’s pharyngeal swab for severe acute respiratory syndrome-Corona virus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) nucleic acid was always negative for four times at disease onset. The clinical doctor could not diagnose as COVID-19 for the negative RT-PCR testing in its early stage.

CXR at disease onset (Fig. 1a, red square) showed patchy opacities in the left middle lung field. Thereafter, he was transferred immediately to the superior hospital, and chest CT showed patchy ground-glass opacity in the upper lobe of the left lung on admission (Fig. 1b), and it rapidly progressed to segmental mixed consolidation and ground glass opacification with air-bronchogram 3 days after admission (Fig. 1c), and it resolved in left upper lobe and also showed multifocal ground-glass opacities 7 days after admission (Fig. 1d1, axial image; Fig. 1d2, ray-summation image; Fig. 1d3, pseudo color MIP; Fig. 1d4, coronal image), and they resolved within 2 weeks (Fig. 1e, coronal image). Fortunately, this patient was diagnosed as "presumed cases" based on early CT findings, the patient was immediately isolated for clinical monitoring so as not to cause regional spread. The fifth RT-PCR test was positive on the fifth day after admission; this patient was finally confirmed as COVID-19. Serial imaging studies in the Fig. 1d, e illustrated that the patient recovered after treatment.

Fig. 1
figure 1

a CXR shows infiltrate in the left middle lung field (red square). b High resolution CT with 1 mm thickness after admission at disease onset shows patchy ground-glass opacity in left upper lobe. c Follow-up CT 3 days after admission shows evolution to a segmental mixed pattern of ground-glass opacities and consolidation that grow larger with air bronchogram in left upper lobe. d Follow-up CT 7 days after admission (d1, axial image; d2, ray-summation image; d3, pseudo color MIP; d4, coronal image) shows multifocal bilateral ground-glass opacities and improvement of mixed ground-glass opacities and consolidation in left upper lobe. e Coronal MPR image obtained 2 weeks after admission shows marked improvement of multifocal ground-glass opacities in both lungs

On the basis of epidemiologic characteristics, clinical manifestations, chest CT images, and laboratory findings, the diagnosis of COVID-19 pneumonia was made. When the RT-PCR test for swab was negative at early stage, the chest image would play an important role in diagnosis [5,6,7]. Therefore, we need to strengthen the recognition of image changes to help clinicians to diagnose quickly and accurately. It is difficult to distinguish COVID-19 pneumonia from other viral pneumonia on CT findings alone; however, high-resolution CT (HRCT) of the chest is critical for early detection and improvement of diagnostic confidence for patient with COVID-19 amid possible negative RT-PCR period.