S10) Radiology of the Chest Flashcards
Penetration refers to the degree to which the x-rays have passed through the body.
What indicates adequate penetration in a normal CXR?
- Vertebrae just visible through heart
- Complete left hemidiaphragm is visible

Identify 5 external/iatrogenic material which obstructs the view in a CXR
- Clothes
- Buttons
- Hair
- Surgical/vascular lines
- Pacemaker
Identify the structures 1-5 in the CXR below:

- Trachea
- Hila
- Lungs
- Diaphragm
- Heart

Identify the structures 6-10 in the CXR below:

- Aortic knuckle
- Ribs
- Scapulae
- Breasts
- Bowel gas

Identify the lung zones in the CXR below:


Identify the pleura in the CXR below:


Identify the costophrenic angles in the CXR below:


Identify the cardiophrenic angles in the CXR below:


Identify the cardiac contours in the CXR below:


Outline the systematic ABC approach used to evaluate a CXR
- Patient demographics
- Projection
- Adequacy
- ABCDE (airway, breathing, circulation, diaphragm, dem bones)
- Review areas
What does one look for in the ‘adequacy’ component of the CXR evaluation?

- Rotation – alignment of spinous processes and clavicles
- Inspiratory volume – look for diaphragm between 5th and 7th ribs, incomplete inspiration, hyperinflation, costo-phrenic recesses and angles, flat diaphragm
- Penetration – vertebrae just visible through the heart, complete left hemidiaphragm visible

What does one look for in the ‘airway’ component of the CXR evaluation?

- Trachea
- Bronchi (hila)

What does one look for in the ‘breathing’ component of the CXR evaluation?

- Lungs
- Pleural spaces
- Lung interfaces

What does one look for in the ‘circulation’ component of the CXR evaluation?

- Aortic arch
- Pulmonary vessels (hila)
- Right heart border: right atrium, middle lobe interface
- Left heart border: left ventricle, lingula interface

What does one look for in the ‘diaphragm’ component of the CXR evaluation?

- Free gas
- Nodules
- Fracture/dislocation
- Mass

Identify the 8 review areas in a CXR evaluation as well as the abnormalities one looks for
- Apices – pneumothorax
- Thoracic inlet – mass
- Paratracheal stripe – mass/lymph nodes
- AP window – lymph nodes
- Hila – mass/collapse
- Behind heart – mass
- Below diaphragm – pneumoperitoneum/mass
- Bones – fracture/mass/missing
What abnormality can one observe in the following CXR?

Pneumothorax

Describe 4 radiological findings observed in a pneumothorax

- Tracheal/mediastinal shift away from the pneumothorax (if tension)
- Depressed hemidiaphragm
- Visible pleural edge
- Radiolucent field around collapsed lung

What abnormality can one observe in the following CXR?

Pleural effusion

Describe 4 radiological findings observed in a pleural effusion

- Uniform white area
- Loss of costophrenic angle
- Hemidiaphragm obscured
- Meniscus at upper border

What abnormality can one observe in the following CXR?

Lobar lung collapse

Describe 4 radiological findings observed in a lobar lung collapse

- Elevation of the ipsilateral hemidiaphragm
- Crowding of the ipsilateral ribs
- Mediastinal shift towards the side of atelectasis
- Crowding of pulmonary vessels

Consolidation is the filling of small airways/alveoli various substances.
Identify 4 possible substances as well as their associated conditions
- Pus – pneumonia
- Blood – haemorrhage
- Fluid – oedema
- Cells – cancer
What abnormality can one observe in the following CXR?

Lung consolidation

Describe 3 radiological findings observed in a lung consolidation

- Dense opacification
- Volume preserved ± increased
- Air bronchogram

What abnormality is observed in the following CXR?

Space occupying lesion

What are the two different kinds of space occupying lesions (single/multiple)?
- Nodule < 3 cm
- Mass > 3 cm

What abnormality is observed in the following CXR?

Cardiac enlargement

What is the cardiothoracic ratio?
- CTR, measured on a PA chest x-ray, is the ratio of maximal horizontal cardiac diameter to maximal horizontal thoracic diameter
- A normal measurement should be <0.5

What abnormality is observed in the following CXR?

Pulmonary cavitation

What is cavitation in a CXR?
A pulmonary cavity is a gas-filled area of the lung in the centre of a nodule or area of consolidation due to infectious and non-infectious diseases

Mike, 60 years old, came into A&E with a 3-day history of fever, cough with greenish sputum and pleuritic chest pain.
Referring to the CXR below, answer the following questions:
- CXR abnormalities?
- Right side percussion?
- Right side breath sounds?
- Diagnosis?

- CXR abnormalities: right-sided opacity in middle zone
- Right side percussion: dull
- Right side breath sounds: crepitus & bronchial breathing
- Diagnosis: pneumonia

John, 55 years old presents to his GP with worsening breathlessness of 4 weeks in duration
Referring to the CXR below, answer the following questions:
- CXR abnormalities?
- Right side percussion?
- Right side breath sounds?
- Diagnosis?

- CXR abnormalities: loss of right heart border & right costophrenic angle
- Right side percussion: stony dull
- Right side breath sounds: absent/diminished
- Diagnosis: pleural effusion

Darren, 22 years old, develops sudden onset, sharp right sided chest pain while jogging. This worsens on inspiration and is associated with SOB
Referring to the CXR below, answer the following questions:
- CXR abnormalities?
- Right side percussion?
- Right side breath sounds?
- Diagnosis?

- CXR abnormalities: right lung collapse, artefact (ECG tag)
- Right side percussion: hyperresonance (more air)
- Right side breath sounds: absent/diminised
- Diagnosis: Spontaneous right-sided pneumothorax

Mr Singh, 50 years old, presents with a cough of 3 months in duration, recent haemoptysis, weight loss, night sweats and low grade fever in the evenings.
Referring to the CXR below, answer the following questions:
- CXR abnormalities?
- Abnormality at arrow?
- Diagnosis?

- CXR abnormalities: bilateral consolidation, patchy distribution in left upper and middle zones, slightly obscured left heart border
- Abnormality at arrow: cavitating lesion
- Diagnosis: tuberculosis

Joseph, 64 years old, increasing SOB for 2 years, chronic cough with productive mucoid sputum, 40 pack year history of smoking.
Referring to the CXR below, answer the following questions:
- CXR abnormalities?
- Right side percussion?
- Auscultation?
- Diagnosis?
- Complications?

- CXR abnormalities: flattened diaphragm, hyperinflated lung fields, two ECG tags
- Right side percussion: diffused hyperresonance
- Auscultation: wheezing, stridor
- Diagnosis: COPD
- Complications: pneumonia, pneumothorax

Stephen, 50 years old, presents with dry cough of 3 months duration, recent haemoptysis, 30 pack year history of smoking and finger clubbing.
Referring to the CXR below, answer the following questions:
- CXR abnormalities?
- Diagnosis?
- Other investigations?
- Complications?

- CXR abnormalities: irregular dense opacity in upper left lobe
- Diagnosis: lung cancer
- Other investigations: tumour markers, lung biopsy
- Complications: compression of left phrenic nerve by lung tumour (elevation of left hemidiaphragm, left mediastinal shift)

Michael, 70 years old, presents with loss of appetite, weight loss of 1 month duration, looks emaciated and unwell.
Referring to the CXR below, answer the following questions:
- CXR abnormalities?
- Diagnosis?
- Origin?
- Investigations?

- CXR abnormalities: obscured right cardiophrenic angle, slightly obscured heart borders, wide bilateral soft tissue nodules (irregular edges, size varies)
- Diagnosis: multiple lung metastases (cannonball metastases)
- Origin: primary renal cancer
- Investigations: full body CT, FBC, tumour biopsy

George, 75 years old, presents with increasing SOB for 2 months duration on minimal exertion, SOB at night, previous AMI at 69 years old, past smoker (gave up after heart attack).
Referring to the CXR below, answer the following questions:
- CXR abnormalities?
- Apex beat change?
- Auscultation?
- Diagnosis?
- Accumulation of fluid?

- CXR abnormalities: bilateral hilar shadowing, loss of left costophrenic angle, slightly enlarged heart
- Apex beat change: laterally shifted apex beat
- Auscultation: fine crackles
- Diagnosis: heart failure
- Accumulation of fluid: pulmonary, saccral and peripheral oedema
