Ch.5 - Recognizing Atelectasis Flashcards
Subsegmental atelectasis usually occurs in patients who…?
Are NOT taking a deep breath (splinting) and produces horizontal linear densities, usually at the lung bases.
Compressive atelectasis occurs passively when the lung is …?
Collapsed by poor inspiration (at the bases), or from a large, adjacent pleural effusion or pneumothorax.
When the underlying abnormality is removed, the lung usually expands.
Round atelectasis is …?
A type of passive atelectasis in which the lung does NOT re-expand when a pleural effusion recedes, usually due to pre-existing pleural disease.
–> May produce a masslike lesion that can mimic a tumor on CXR.
Obstructive atelectasis occurs …?
Distal to an occluding lesion of the bronchial tree because of reabsorption of the air in the distal airspaces via the pulmonary capillary bed.
Important point about obstructive atelectasis?
Produces consistently recognizable patterns of collapse based on the assumptions that the visceral and parietal pleura invariably remain in contact with each other and every lobe of the lung is anchored at or near the hilum.
Signs of obstructive atelectasis include:
- Displacement of the fissures.
- Increased density of the affected lung.
- Shift of the mobile structures of the thorax toward the atelectasis.
- Compensatory hyperinflation of the unaffected ipsilateral or contralateral lung.
Atelectasis tends to resolve quickly when …?
If it occurs acutely.
The more chronic the process, the longer it takes to resolve.
What is COMMON to ALL forms of atelectasis?
Loss of volume in some or all of the lung –> Increased density of the lung involved.
4 main signs of atelectasis:
- Displacement of the major/minor fissures.
- Increased density of the atelectatic portion of lung.
- Shift of the mobile structures in the thorax, ie, the heart, trachea, and/or hemidiaphragm.
- Compensatory overinflation of the unaffected segments, lobes, or lung.
At least … cm of the right heart border normally projects to the right of the spine on a NON ROTATED frontal radiograph.
1cm.
A slight RIGHTWARD deviation of the trachea is always present at the site of the left-sided …?
AORTIC KNOB.
In about …% of normal people the left hemidiaphragm is HIGHER than the right.
10%.
How can we see the COMPENSATORY OVERINFLATION of the unaffected ipsilateral lobes or the contralateral lung?
This may be noticeable on the lateral projection by an increase in the size of the retrosternal clear space and on the frontal projection by extension of the overinflated contralateral lung across the midline.
Subsegmental atelectasis is also called?
Discoid atelectasis or platelike atelectasis.
Subsegmental atelectasis produces?
LINEAR densities of varying thickness usually PARALLEL to the diaphragm, most commonly at the lung BASES.
Subsegmental atelectasis occurs most commonly?
In patients who are “splinting”, i.e., not talking a deep breath, such as post-op patients or patients with pleuritic chest pain.
On a single study, WITHOUT prior exam for comparison, subsegmental atelectasis can look identical to what?
Chronic, linear scarring.