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The Fundamentals of ChestRoentgenology
Fundamental Observations
Silhouette sign
Air bronchograms
Solid spheres vs. hollow tubes
Basic Disease Processes
Alveolar vs. interstitial lung disease
Opacified hemithorax
Cavities
The Fundamentals of ChestRoentgenology
Diseases
Congestive Heart Failure
Pneumothorax
When two objects of the samedensity touch each other, theedge between them disappearsWhen two objects of the samedensity touch each other, theedge between them disappears
A
B
Silhouette Sign
Using the Silhouette Sign
Right middle lobe silhouettes right heartborder
Lingula silhouettes left heart border
Right lower lobe silhouettes righthemidiaphragm
Left lower lobe silhouettes lefthemidiaphragm
Where is this patient’s heart?
This patient hashad the left lungremoved – apneumonectomy.Fibrous tissue nowfills the lefthemithorax. Theheart is “invisible”because it nolonger borders onan air-filled lung. Itnow borders onsoft tissue densitywhich is the samedensity as theheart. Therefore,the edge of theheartdisappears=thesilhouette sign.
Using the Silhouette Sign
The mass (red arrow)silhouettes the rightheart border which isto say there is nolonger an edge of theright heart seen. Thatmeans the mass is (a)touching the rightheart border (the massis anterior) and (b) themass is the samedensity as the heart(fluid or soft tissuedensity). The mass isa thymoma.
Where in the chest is this mass?
Using the Silhouette Sign
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Air Bronchogram
Bronchi are not visible since their walls arethin, they contain air, are surrounded by air
When something of fluid density fillsalveoli, air in bronchus becomes visible,e.g.
Pulmonary edema fluid
Blood
Gastric aspirate
Inflammatory exudate
Air Bronchogram
The visibility of air in the bronchi becauseof surrounding airspace disease is calledan “air bronchogram”
An air bronchogram is almost always asign of airspace disease
The black branchingstructures are theresult of air in thebronchi, now visiblebecause densityother than airsurrounds them (inthis case it isinflammatory exudatefrom a pneumonia).
Solid Spheres vs. Hollow Tubes
A. Solid spheres are homogeneous from oneside to other
Blood vessels and masses
B. Hollow tubes have a lower density incenter
Bronchi and cavities
A
B
Solid spheres or hollow tubes?
There are multiplenodules visible onthe CT scan of thechest in this patient.
In most cases thenodules are due tometastases from aprimary malignancyin an organ otherthan the lung.
This disease isfluffy and indistinctin its margins, it isconfluent andtends to behomogeneous. Inboth upper lobes,you can see airbronchograms.This is an alveolar(airspace) disease,in this casepulmonary edemaon a non-cardiogenic basis.