ABCDE Method A systematic review prevents missed findings.
| Letter | Structure | What to Assess |
|---|---|---|
| A | Airway | Trachea midline? Deviation suggests tension pneumothorax, mass, or atelectasis. |
| B | Bones | Ribs, clavicles, spine, shoulders. Fractures, lytic lesions, rib notching (coarctation). |
| C | Cardiac silhouette & Mediastinum | Cardiothoracic ratio <50%. Aortic knob, AP window, hilar size and density. |
| D | Diaphragm | Right higher than left by ~1.5 cm. Flattening = hyperinflation. Free air under diaphragm? |
| E | Everything Else (Lung fields) | Compare apices to bases, side‑to‑side. Look for opacity, lucency, nodules, lines. |
| F | Foreign bodies / Tubes / Lines | ETT depth (3‑5 cm above carina), CVC tip (SVC/RA junction), chest tube position. |
| Pattern | Description | Common Causes | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Consolidation | Alveoli filled with fluid/pus/cells | Pneumonia, pulmonary edema, hemorrhage | Air bronchograms (patent airways surrounded by opaque alveoli), silhouette sign |
| Atelectasis | Collapsed lung | Mucus plug, pleural effusion, tumor obstruction | Volume loss: fissure displacement, diaphragmatic elevation, mediastinal shift toward opacity |
| Pleural Effusion | Fluid in pleural space | CHF, pneumonia, malignancy, PE, cirrhosis | Blunted costophrenic angle, meniscus sign. Supine CXR: hazy hemithorax. |
| Interstitial Opacities | Thickening of interstitium | Pulmonary edema (Kerley B lines), ILD, viral pneumonia | Reticular (lines), nodular, or reticulonodular patterns |
| Mass / Nodule | Discrete opacity <3 cm (nodule) or >3 cm (mass) | Lung cancer, granuloma, metastasis, hamartoma | Assess margins (spiculated = malignant), calcification (benign), growth over time |
| Pattern | Description | Common Causes |
|---|---|---|
| Pneumothorax | Air in pleural space | Spontaneous (tall thin male, bleb rupture), traumatic, iatrogenic |
| Tension Pneumothorax | One‑way valve → progressive air trapping | Tracheal deviation away from lucent side, depressed hemidiaphragm, hypotension |
| Hyperinflation | Increased lung volumes bilaterally | COPD (flattened diaphragms, ↑ retrosternal airspace, bullae) |
| Pneumomediastinum | Air tracking along mediastinal structures | Esophageal rupture (Boerhaave), bronchial tear, subcutaneous emphysema |
| Pattern | Appearance | Differential Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|
| Ground‑Glass Opacity (GGO) | Hazy increased attenuation with visible bronchovascular markings | PJP, early IPF, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, pulmonary edema, viral pneumonia (COVID‑19) |
| Consolidation | Dense opacity obscuring vessels and airways | Pneumonia, COP, adenocarcinoma (mucinous), lymphoma |
| Reticulation | Fine linear or curvilinear opacities (net‑like) | IPF (UIP), NSIP, connective tissue disease‑ILD |
| Honeycombing | Clustered cystic airspaces with thick walls (end‑stage fibrosis) | IPF (UIP pattern), chronic hypersensitivity pneumonitis, sarcoidosis (stage IV) |
| Traction Bronchiectasis | Dilated airways due to surrounding fibrosis pulling them open | IPF, fibrotic NSIP, chronic HP |
| Crazy Paving | GGO with superimposed interlobular septal thickening | PJP, pulmonary alveolar proteinosis, lipoid pneumonia, ARDS |
| Tree‑in‑Bud | Centrilobular nodules with branching linear opacities | Endobronchial infection: TB, MAC, aspiration, cystic fibrosis |
| Mosaic Attenuation | Patchwork of different lung densities; due to air trapping or vascular disease | Hypersensitivity pneumonitis, chronic PE, constrictive bronchiolitis |
| Finding | Possible Causes |
|---|---|
| Unilateral hilar enlargement | Lung cancer, TB, lymphoma (less common), primary pulmonary artery sarcoma |
| Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy (BHL) | Sarcoidosis, TB, lymphoma, silicosis, fungal infection (histoplasmosis) |
| Eggshell calcification of hilar nodes | Silicosis, coal worker's pneumoconiosis, sarcoidosis (rare) |
| Anterior mediastinal mass | 4 T's: Thymoma, Teratoma (germ cell), Thyroid (substernal goiter), Terrible lymphoma |
| Middle mediastinal mass | Lymphadenopathy, bronchogenic cyst, aortic aneurysm |
| Posterior mediastinal mass | Neurogenic tumor (schwannoma, neurofibroma), esophageal duplication cyst |
| Widened mediastinum (>8 cm on supine CXR) | Aortic dissection/aneurysm, traumatic aortic injury, mediastinal hematoma, lymphoma |
| Sign | Description | Associated Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Air Bronchogram | Air‑filled bronchi visible against opaque lung | Consolidation (pneumonia, edema) |
| Silhouette Sign | Loss of normal border between two structures | Localizes lobar pathology (see above) |
| Deep Sulcus Sign | Abnormally deep, lucent costophrenic angle | Pneumothorax (supine patient) |
| Golden S Sign | Reverse‑S shape of minor fissure | Right upper lobe collapse due to central mass (e.g., lung cancer) |
| Luftsichel Sign | Crescent of hyperlucent lung between aortic arch and collapsed left upper lobe | Left upper lobe collapse |
| Continuous Diaphragm Sign | Air outlines entire diaphragm (seen with pneumomediastinum) | Pneumomediastinum |
| Hampton Hump | Wedge‑shaped peripheral opacity | Pulmonary infarction (PE) |
| Westermark Sign | Focal oligemia (hyperlucency) distal to PE | Acute PE |
| Kerley B Lines | Short horizontal lines at lung periphery (interlobular septal thickening) | Pulmonary edema, lymphangitic carcinomatosis |
| Clinical Scenario | Initial Imaging | Next Step / Advanced |
|---|---|---|
| Suspected pneumonia | CXR (PA & lateral) | CT if complicated (abscess, empyema) or non‑resolving |
| Suspected PE | CXR (to rule out other causes) | CT Pulmonary Angiography (CTPA) or V/Q scan |
| Suspected ILD | CXR (often normal or nonspecific) | HRCT (inspiratory + expiratory) |
| Lung cancer screening | Low‑dose CT (annual, 50‑80 yo, ≥20 pack‑years) | PET‑CT for staging, biopsy |
| Suspected pneumothorax | CXR (upright PA) | CT if equivocal; Ultrasound in trauma (eFAST) |
| Pleural effusion | CXR, lateral decubitus | Ultrasound for thoracentesis guidance |
| Hemoptysis | CXR | CT angiography (bronchial artery mapping) ± bronchoscopy |