Chest Imaging · Interpretation Primer for Medical Students

🩻 Chest Imaging Interpretation A Primer for Medical Students · CXR & HRCT Patterns

1. Systematic Approach to Chest X‑Ray (CXR)

ABCDE Method A systematic review prevents missed findings.

LetterStructureWhat to Assess
AAirwayTrachea midline? Deviation suggests tension pneumothorax, mass, or atelectasis.
BBonesRibs, clavicles, spine, shoulders. Fractures, lytic lesions, rib notching (coarctation).
CCardiac silhouette & MediastinumCardiothoracic ratio <50%. Aortic knob, AP window, hilar size and density.
DDiaphragmRight higher than left by ~1.5 cm. Flattening = hyperinflation. Free air under diaphragm?
EEverything Else (Lung fields)Compare apices to bases, side‑to‑side. Look for opacity, lucency, nodules, lines.
FForeign bodies / Tubes / LinesETT depth (3‑5 cm above carina), CVC tip (SVC/RA junction), chest tube position.
🔍 Technical Quality Check First: Rotation (clavicles equidistant), Inspiration (8‑10 posterior ribs visible), Penetration (thoracic spine barely visible through heart).

2. Common CXR Patterns & Their Meaning

Increased Opacity (White)

PatternDescriptionCommon CausesKey Features
ConsolidationAlveoli filled with fluid/pus/cellsPneumonia, pulmonary edema, hemorrhageAir bronchograms (patent airways surrounded by opaque alveoli), silhouette sign
AtelectasisCollapsed lungMucus plug, pleural effusion, tumor obstructionVolume loss: fissure displacement, diaphragmatic elevation, mediastinal shift toward opacity
Pleural EffusionFluid in pleural spaceCHF, pneumonia, malignancy, PE, cirrhosisBlunted costophrenic angle, meniscus sign. Supine CXR: hazy hemithorax.
Interstitial OpacitiesThickening of interstitiumPulmonary edema (Kerley B lines), ILD, viral pneumoniaReticular (lines), nodular, or reticulonodular patterns
Mass / NoduleDiscrete opacity <3 cm (nodule) or >3 cm (mass)Lung cancer, granuloma, metastasis, hamartomaAssess margins (spiculated = malignant), calcification (benign), growth over time

Increased Lucency (Black)

PatternDescriptionCommon Causes
PneumothoraxAir in pleural spaceSpontaneous (tall thin male, bleb rupture), traumatic, iatrogenic
Tension PneumothoraxOne‑way valve → progressive air trappingTracheal deviation away from lucent side, depressed hemidiaphragm, hypotension
HyperinflationIncreased lung volumes bilaterallyCOPD (flattened diaphragms, ↑ retrosternal airspace, bullae)
PneumomediastinumAir tracking along mediastinal structuresEsophageal rupture (Boerhaave), bronchial tear, subcutaneous emphysema

Silhouette Sign

3. High‑Resolution CT (HRCT): Key Patterns in ILD

PatternAppearanceDifferential Diagnosis
Ground‑Glass Opacity (GGO)Hazy increased attenuation with visible bronchovascular markingsPJP, early IPF, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, pulmonary edema, viral pneumonia (COVID‑19)
ConsolidationDense opacity obscuring vessels and airwaysPneumonia, COP, adenocarcinoma (mucinous), lymphoma
ReticulationFine linear or curvilinear opacities (net‑like)IPF (UIP), NSIP, connective tissue disease‑ILD
HoneycombingClustered cystic airspaces with thick walls (end‑stage fibrosis)IPF (UIP pattern), chronic hypersensitivity pneumonitis, sarcoidosis (stage IV)
Traction BronchiectasisDilated airways due to surrounding fibrosis pulling them openIPF, fibrotic NSIP, chronic HP
Crazy PavingGGO with superimposed interlobular septal thickeningPJP, pulmonary alveolar proteinosis, lipoid pneumonia, ARDS
Tree‑in‑BudCentrilobular nodules with branching linear opacitiesEndobronchial infection: TB, MAC, aspiration, cystic fibrosis
Mosaic AttenuationPatchwork of different lung densities; due to air trapping or vascular diseaseHypersensitivity pneumonitis, chronic PE, constrictive bronchiolitis
💡 UIP Pattern on HRCT (diagnostic of IPF): Subpleural and basal predominance, honeycombing, traction bronchiectasis, absence of extensive GGO or nodules.

4. Disease‑Specific Imaging Findings

Pneumonia

Tuberculosis (TB)

COPD & Emphysema

Pulmonary Edema

Pulmonary Embolism (PE)

Sarcoidosis

Pneumothorax Recognition

Pleural Effusion

Lung Cancer

5. Hilar & Mediastinal Abnormalities

FindingPossible Causes
Unilateral hilar enlargementLung cancer, TB, lymphoma (less common), primary pulmonary artery sarcoma
Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy (BHL)Sarcoidosis, TB, lymphoma, silicosis, fungal infection (histoplasmosis)
Eggshell calcification of hilar nodesSilicosis, coal worker's pneumoconiosis, sarcoidosis (rare)
Anterior mediastinal mass4 T's: Thymoma, Teratoma (germ cell), Thyroid (substernal goiter), Terrible lymphoma
Middle mediastinal massLymphadenopathy, bronchogenic cyst, aortic aneurysm
Posterior mediastinal massNeurogenic tumor (schwannoma, neurofibroma), esophageal duplication cyst
Widened mediastinum (>8 cm on supine CXR)Aortic dissection/aneurysm, traumatic aortic injury, mediastinal hematoma, lymphoma

6. Pediatric Chest Imaging Pearls

7. Classic Radiologic Signs & Eponyms

SignDescriptionAssociated Condition
Air BronchogramAir‑filled bronchi visible against opaque lungConsolidation (pneumonia, edema)
Silhouette SignLoss of normal border between two structuresLocalizes lobar pathology (see above)
Deep Sulcus SignAbnormally deep, lucent costophrenic anglePneumothorax (supine patient)
Golden S SignReverse‑S shape of minor fissureRight upper lobe collapse due to central mass (e.g., lung cancer)
Luftsichel SignCrescent of hyperlucent lung between aortic arch and collapsed left upper lobeLeft upper lobe collapse
Continuous Diaphragm SignAir outlines entire diaphragm (seen with pneumomediastinum)Pneumomediastinum
Hampton HumpWedge‑shaped peripheral opacityPulmonary infarction (PE)
Westermark SignFocal oligemia (hyperlucency) distal to PEAcute PE
Kerley B LinesShort horizontal lines at lung periphery (interlobular septal thickening)Pulmonary edema, lymphangitic carcinomatosis

8. Choosing the Right Imaging Study

Clinical ScenarioInitial ImagingNext Step / Advanced
Suspected pneumoniaCXR (PA & lateral)CT if complicated (abscess, empyema) or non‑resolving
Suspected PECXR (to rule out other causes)CT Pulmonary Angiography (CTPA) or V/Q scan
Suspected ILDCXR (often normal or nonspecific)HRCT (inspiratory + expiratory)
Lung cancer screeningLow‑dose CT (annual, 50‑80 yo, ≥20 pack‑years)PET‑CT for staging, biopsy
Suspected pneumothoraxCXR (upright PA)CT if equivocal; Ultrasound in trauma (eFAST)
Pleural effusionCXR, lateral decubitusUltrasound for thoracentesis guidance
HemoptysisCXRCT angiography (bronchial artery mapping) ± bronchoscopy

9. Quick Reference: Pattern Recognition

Upper Lobe Predominance

  • Reactivation TB
  • Silicosis / Coal worker's
  • Sarcoidosis
  • Ankylosing spondylitis
  • Langerhans cell histiocytosis

Lower Lobe Predominance

  • IPF (UIP)
  • Asbestosis
  • Connective tissue disease‑ILD (RA, SSc)
  • Aspiration
  • Chronic aspiration
💡 Upper lobe cavitary lesion mnemonic: TB, Squamous cell carcinoma, Fungal (aspergilloma), ANKylosing spondylitis, Silicosis.

🩻 Chest Imaging Interpretation · High‑yield primer for medical students and clinical rotations.
Systematic CXR approach, common patterns, HRCT findings, disease‑specific pearls, and classic radiologic signs.