Pulmonary acute suppurative abscess problem and NLS study of Biophilia Intruder

Pulmonary acute suppurative abscess problem and NLS study of Biophilia Intruder


The urgency of diagnosing and treating the problem of acute suppurative lung abscess depends on the prevalence and severity of this pathology. Acute suppurative lung abscess (APAL) is part of what is commonly referred to as lung abscess destructive disease (PDDL). Gangrenous abscesses, pulmonary gangrene, and pleural empyema are also included in this group.


Lung gangrene and pleural empyema tended to increase in patients with abscesses. This is the result of late diagnosis and hospitalization, and inadequate treatment of pneumonia.


Despite improvements in treatment, the mortality rate from PDDL remains high, possibly reaching 70%. More than one third of patients transitioned from an acute to a chronic course. The fatality rate for acute lung abscesses ranged from 7.2% to 28.3%; during gangrene - from 23.4% to 74.1%.


Due to this fact, timely and accurate disease diagnosis is of great practical importance; such diagnostic results are the basis for patients to choose treatment strategies.


Completion of traditional imaging examinations and detailed study of the pathological lesion structure; comprehensive evaluation of radiological and NLS examination results by Biophilia Intruder may be the basis for patient treatment strategy selection.