Chest x-ray
From IDWiki
Two Views
Frontal View
Assess Quality
- May be PA (preferred, taken at a standard 1.8 m distance) or AP (done for patients who are unable to go to imaging department or to position for PA)
- PA will magnify the mediastinum
- AP more often done at an upward angle, which can blunt the left dome of the diaphragm
- Inspiration: at least 6 anterior ribs should be above the left dome of the diaphragm
- Shallow inspiration can result in enlarged cardiac diameter, crowding of lung vessels, and basal atelectasis
- Rotation: spine of the vertebral bodies should be midline between the heads of the clavicles
- Can make one lung appear lighter/darker compared to the other
- PA rotated right can result in prominent aortic arch on the right, simulating mediastinal mass
- AP rotated left can also make aortic arch more prominent
Assess Pathology
- Cardiothoracic ratio: should be less than 50% on a PA x-ray
- If greater, it suggests cardiomegaly
- Domes of the diaphragm: they should be clear and well-defined
- If obscured, it suggests pathology of the adjacent lower lung
- Heart borders: they should be clear and well-defined
- If obscured, it suggests pathology of the adjacent lung
- Hila: should be similar density bilaterally, with left hilum at the same level as the right hilum or slightly higher
- Bones
- Overlooked sites: lung apex, superimposed on the heart, around each hilum, under the diaphragm
Lateral View
- Vertebral bodies: should become more transparent as they descend
- If they fail to do so (i.e. become whiter, or stay the same density), it suggests lower lobe disease
- Domes of the diaphragm: they should be clear and well-defined
- The right dome is visible front to back, while the left dome delineation fades anteriorly, where it merges with the cardiac shadow
- If obscured, it suggests pathology of the adjacent lower lung
- Hila: assess the size/density (should be normal) and the borders (should be well-defined rather than bumpy or irregular)
- Cardiac shadow: any well-defined or abrupt change could suggest pathology
- Lungs: assess for lung densities, paying particular attention to the cardiac shadow, posterior to heart, and in the costophrenic recess
Parenchymal Changes
Alveolar and Interstitial Changes
- Something radiodense (pus, blood, water, protein, debris) can fill the alveoli, or the interstitial tissue that supports and surrounds the alveoli can become radiodense (from edema, inflammation, fibrosis)
- However, it can be very difficult to categorize into one or the other category
| Alveolar | Interstitial | |
|---|---|---|
| Common findings |
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| Occasional findings |
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