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Fundamentals CVR
Chest x-ray
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Cards (28)
Anterior
-posterior (AP) direction
Taken from in front of the patient
Patient often in lying – scapular shadows within lung fields
Often taken on ward/
inpatient
setting
Cardiac size appears
larger
Diaphragm
sits higher –positional/compressive forces
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Posterior
-anterior (PA) direction
Taken from
behind
the patient
Patient in standing with hands behind head – scapular
shadows
out of
lung
fields
Often taken in
Outpatient
setting
Cardiac
size appears
smaller
Mediastinum
wider
Pulmonary vessels are
same
size in upper and
lower
lung fields
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Quality
check
RIP
Rotation
Inspiration
Penetration
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Rotation
If rotated the
lung
will not appear the same on both sides
Check the
medial
ends of the clavicle are both the
same
distance from the spinal column
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Inspiration
Can you see the 10th rib posteriorly and 6th rib anteriorly?
Can you count too many ribs?
Hyperinflation
Can you count too few?
Poor inspiration
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Penetration
Can you see
spinous
processes above the
heart
?
Can you see gaps between vertebrae below the
cardiac
shadow- if not visible its under
penetrated
,
If very
penetrated
its been over
penetrated
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Interpreting
X-ray
Airways
Bones
Cardiac
silhouette
Diaphragm
Edges
Fields
Gas
Hilum
Instrumentation
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Trachea
Midline
to
clavicle
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Mediastinum
Right side should be
2/3mm
from etches edge and left
1/2cm
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Hilia
Left should be
2.5cm
higher than right, compare shape and
density
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Border
of heart
Clear edge, maximum diameter should be less than
1/2
the
transthoracic
diameter
Dextracardia
is where the heart sits on the
right side
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Diaphragm
Should be
dome
,
clear
borders
Displacement=
collapsed
lung
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Soft
tissues
Enlargement
(breast cancer)
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Classification
of abnormalities
White
(Collapse, Consolidation, Plural effusion, foreign bodies)
Black
(Hyperinflation, pneumothorax, bullae)
Enlarged heart
and
mediastinum
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Collapse
Upper lobe- trachea
deviated
Left lower lobe- triangle
density
behind
heart
, no medial diaphragmatic border
Right lower lobe-
horizontal fissure
displaced downwards, loss of
right
border
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Consolidation
Alveoli
and small
airways
are full of dense material
Obscures the same borders as in
collapse
Opacity is
not
defined and is
patchy
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Pulmonary
oedema
Upper
lobe diversion
Increased
heart size
Kerley B
lines
Bat
wing
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Plural
effusion
Fluid building up from the base
Meniscus
shape shadow
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Foreign
bodies
Tumours
Abscess
Inhaled
object
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Hyperinflation
Know
horizontal diaphragm
More than
10
ribs visible
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Pneumothorax
Unilateral black
lung
Lung edge
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Bullae
Permanent
air-filled space
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Enlarged heart
Over
1/3
of chest
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Widened mediastinum
Wide shadow
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There are two main types of fissures: oblique (horizontal) and vertical (diaphragmatic).
The lungs are divided into lobes by fissures, which are lines that separate them from one another.
Increased
density on an X-ray can indicate fluid accumulation, such as pleural effusion or
pulmonary edema.
The left lung has
three
lobes separated by
horizontal
fissures.