The claim that bilateral lower lobe nodules are the most dangerous is false; the location does not determine the nature of the nodule and further investigation is needed to clarify the exact nature.
The claim that bilateral lower lobe nodules are the most dangerous is false, and there is no authoritative literature or clinical case that proves that bilateral lower lobe nodules are the most dangerous. There is no direct relationship between the location of a nodule and its nature, and a nodule growing in a particular location is not necessarily malignant.
The nature of the nodule can only be clarified by further investigations. For example, if the nodule is caused by pneumonia, blood tests, C-reactive protein, sputum culture and other tests are needed to identify the specific causative organisms before the diagnosis of inflammatory nodule can be made, and it is not based on the location of the nodule that makes the diagnosis.
Therefore, the location does not determine the nature of the nodule, and the presence of lung nodules should be promptly examined by a doctor for clarification.