CXR ddx Flashcards

1
Q

bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy

A
  1. TB
  2. Sarcoidosis
  3. Lymphoma
  4. Bronchial carcinoma, metastaatic tumour
  5. recurrent pneumonia
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2
Q

cavitating lung lesions

A
  1. Abscesses
  2. Infections with: TANKS - 1)TB 2)Aspergillus 3)Nocardia 4)Klebsiella 5)S. aureus and PSeudomonas
  3. Infarctions
  4. Tumours
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3
Q

COin lesions

A
  1. TUmours: 1ary or 2dary from breast, RCC, prostate, bone, GI
  2. hartomas, granulomas, cysts
  3. Infections: TB, pneumonia, abscesses
  4. foreign body
  5. infarction
  6. encysted pleural effusion
  7. rheumatoid nodule
  8. vasculitides
  9. AV malformations
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4
Q

parenchyma changes (reticualr opacifications):

A

acute interstitial oedema
infection
fibrosis
malignancy

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5
Q

Heart failure appearance

A
Alveolar shadowing (bat)
kerley-B lines
Cardiomegaly
upper lobe Diversions (prominent blood vessels)
Effusion
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6
Q

Upper lobe fibrosis

A
  1. Extrinsic allergic alveolitis
  2. radiotherapy
  3. cystic fibrosis
  4. sarcoidosis
  5. ankylosing spondylitis
  6. berylliosis
  7. TB
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7
Q

lower lobe fibrosis”

A
  1. rheumatoid arthritis and other connective tissue
  2. scleroderma
  3. asbestosis
  4. Cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis
  5. Drugs: methotrexate, amiodarone
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8
Q

white hemithorax

A
  1. large pleural effusion
    2 collapse
  2. pneumonectomy
  3. congenital absence of lung
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9
Q

increased density in the hemithorax with CENTRAl mediastinum

A

consolidatiom +/- aib bronchogram

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10
Q

increased density of the hemithorax with mediastinum away from the dense hemithorax

A

pleural effusion

diaphragmatic hernia

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11
Q

increased density of hemithorax with mediastinum TOWARD the dense hemithorax

A

COllapse

Post-pneumonectomy

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12
Q

honeycom preceded by ground glass

A

cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis

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13
Q

tramlines

A

broncheictasis

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14
Q

fluid level

A

pleural effusion

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15
Q

points when inspecting the hila

A

The left hilum is usually higher than the right
Check the size of the hila
Check the density of the hila
If a hilum is displaced, ask yourself if it has been pushed or pulled

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16
Q

points when inspecting pleura

A

the pleura and pleural spaces are only visible when abnormal
There should be no visible space between the visceral and parietal pleura
Check for pleural thickening and pleural effusions
If you miss a tension pneumothorax you risk your patient’s life - as well as your result at finals!

17
Q

what does pleural thickening look like?

A

may seem like a ‘peripheral effusion’ but lacks meniscus sign

Unilateral pleural thickening

\+/- Loss of right lung volume if mesothelioma
Shadowing over the whole right lung due to circumferential pleural thickening
18
Q

pleural effusion appearance

A

Thelower zone is uniformly white
At the top of this white area there is a concave surface - meniscus sign
The left heart border, costophrenic angle and hemidiaphragm are obscured if large effusion on the left
Slight blunting of the costophrenic angle indicates a small pleural effusion on that side

19
Q

do pleural effusions cause volume loss? what if there is mediastinal shift towards the hemithorax with blunted costophrenic angle ?

A

it is likely lower lobe collapse because pleural effusions do not cause volume loss and don’t pull the mediastinum towards them (but may push it away)

20
Q

left atrial enlargement appearance

A

The left and right heart borders are marked (arrows)
Extra right heart border - formed by the edge of the enlarged left atrium (blue area)
Slight bulge in the left heart border (*) due to enlargement of the left atrial appendage
Splaying of the carina to greater than 90 degrees - the carina lies directly above the left atrium