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| Version | User | Scope of changes |
|---|---|---|
| Jun 22 2009, 9:08 AM EDT | M.J.Fuller | 1 word added, 1 photo added |
| Jun 22 2009, 1:54 AM EDT | M.J.Fuller | 5 words added, 3 words deleted |
Identification of consolidation on chest images is a useful skill for radiographers. Care must be taken to not call every lung opacity a consolidation. There are a variety of causes of lung opacity and a number of known false signs. This page looks at some of the other consolidation-like appearances.
Case 1
This patient presented for chest radiography with "known ischaemic heart disease and chest pain". There is loss of clarity of the right heart border suggesting RML pathology. There is no abnormal RML opacity. There is evidence of pectus excavatum (depression of the sternum). Pectus excavatum is a known cause of false RML disease and is likely to be the cause of the pseudo-silhouette sign on the PA image. beware!
Case 2
This patient presented for chest radiography with a history of recent facial nerve palsy. There is loss of the right cardiac border. The lateral image demonstrates a severe pectus excavatum deformity (arrowed). In these patients the heart tend to be displaced towards the left as a result of the limited space between the depressed sternum and the spine. The loss of the right heart border on the PA image was not a result of a disease process.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pectus1.jpg
Pericardial Fat
Case 1
This 49 year old female patient presented for chest radiography with "recent onset of chest pain".
There is loss of clarity of the right heart border. In addition, there is loss of clarity of the left heart border. There are good reasons to consider that these silhouette signs are not caused by lung consolidation.The likely cause of the loss of clarity of the cardiac silhouette is the presence of pericardial fat.
- The patients history and clinical signs do not suggest a diagnosis of infection/consolidation
- there is no evidence of alveolar opacity
- the lateral view does not demonstrate alveolar opacity that you would expect with a lung consolidation
There is no abnormal RML or left upper lobe (lingula segment) opacity. Where there is a significant amount of pericardial fat visible on the PA/AP chest image, you would expect to see evidence of this on the lateral image (white arrow)
patient with minimal pericardial fat for comparison (ignore arrow)