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In acute dyspnea, the use of chest radiography is frequent and not very contributive, especially in the elderly patients.
However, early diagnosis of the cause of dyspnea in the ED is associated with a better prognosis, in particular for the identification of an infectious or cardiac origin.
Chest CT has already shown better diagnostic performances than conventional radiography in several pathologies such as low respiratory infection, and the development of so-called "low dose" scans allows to limit the irradiation during this examination.
The investigators aim to conduct a diagnostic study comparing non-injected chest CT-scan and conventional chest radiography in patients older than 65 presenting in the ED with acute dyspnea to assess whether CT-scan improves diagnosis.
Full description
Patients of 65 years and older presenting to the emergency department with acute dyspnea and for whom a chest radiography is mandatory will be screened for inclusion. If the inclusion criteria are met and in the absence of non-inclusion criteria, free and informed oral consent will be sought.
Once the patient is included, management by the emergency physician will be routine.
A non-injected chest CT scan will be requested to the emergency radiology department in addition to the chest radiography. As a result, an X-ray and then a CT scan will be performed in each patient.
3 diagnoses will be collected:
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240 participants in 1 patient group
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Judith GORLICKI, MD; Yonathan FREUND, PU-PH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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