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Chest X-ray Interpretation High-Yield Guide

Quick systematic approach

ABCDEFGHI mnemonic:
  • Airway (trachea, carina, bronchi)
  • Bones (ribs, clavicles, spine, shoulders)
  • Cardiac (size, borders, CTR <0.5)
  • Diaphragm (position, costophrenic angles)
  • Extrathoracic (soft tissues, lines, tubes)
  • Fields (lung zones, compare sides)
  • Great vessels (aorta, mediastinum)
  • Hila (size, position, density)
  • Inspect hidden areas (behind heart, below diaphragm, apices)

Technical quality checklist

  • Projection: PA (preferred) vs AP (magnifies heart, portable)
  • Rotation: Medial clavicle heads equidistant from spinous processes
  • Inspiration: 5-6 anterior ribs or 9-10 posterior ribs visible
  • Penetration: Vertebrae just visible behind heart
  • Patient position: Centralized, scapulae rotated out

Priority abnormalities to spot

Pneumothorax
  • Absent lung markings peripheral to visceral pleural line
  • Look at apices on expiration film if suspected
  • Tension: mediastinal shift away, flattened hemidiaphragm
Consolidation
  • Air space opacification
  • Air bronchograms visible
  • Lobar or patchy distribution
  • Common locations: RLL, RML, lingula
Collapse (Atelectasis)
  • Volume loss: elevated hemidiaphragm, mediastinal shift toward
  • Crowded ribs on affected side
  • Silhouette sign helps localize lobe
Pleural effusion
  • Blunted costophrenic angle (>75 mL)
  • Meniscus sign on upright
  • Complete opacification if massive
  • Associated with collapse if significant
Pulmonary edema
  • Upper lobe blood diversion (early)
  • Kerley B lines (interstitial)
  • Bat wing/perihilar opacity (alveolar)
  • Pleural effusions (often bilateral)
Mass/nodule
  • Site: Which lobe/zone (lung vs zone/lobe)
  • Size: Measure in cm
  • Number: Solitary vs multiple
  • Shape: Round, irregular, spiculated
  • Margin: Smooth vs irregular

Cardiothoracic ratio (CTR)

  • Measure widest cardiac diameter รท widest thoracic diameter
  • Normal: <0.5 on PA film
  • Cardiomegaly: >0.5
  • Remember: AP films magnify heart, CTR unreliable

Silhouette sign

Loss of normal border indicates adjacent opacity:
  • Right heart border loss โ†’ RML or anterior segment of RUL
  • Left heart border loss โ†’ Lingula or anterior LUL
  • Right hemidiaphragm loss โ†’ RLL
  • Left hemidiaphragm loss โ†’ LLL
  • Aortic knob loss โ†’ LUL (posterior)

Hidden areas (commonly missed)

  • Apices: Pancoast tumor, pneumothorax
  • Behind heart: LLL collapse/consolidation
  • Below diaphragm: Free air (Rigler sign)
  • Lung periphery: Pneumothorax, rib fractures
  • Soft tissues: Surgical emphysema, masses

Lines and tubes positioning

  • ETT tip: 3-5 cm above carina (T4-T5 level)
  • NGT: Below diaphragm, in stomach
  • Central line: SVC, tip at cavoatrial junction
  • Chest drain: In pleural space, not in fissure

Common exam patterns

  • Most common cause of unilateral white-out โ†’ massive pleural effusion
  • Sail sign โ†’ LUL collapse
  • Golden S sign โ†’ RUL collapse with central mass
  • Air under diaphragm โ†’ perforated viscus
  • Rigler sign (double wall sign) โ†’ pneumoperitoneum
  • Kerley B lines โ†’ pulmonary edema or lymphangitis

Reporting structure

  1. Patient details: Name, ID, date, projection
  1. Technical quality: Adequate/inadequate with reasons
  1. Systematic review: Describe findings in each area
  1. Abnormalities: List and describe all abnormalities
  1. Clinical correlation: Compare with previous if available
  1. Conclusion: Summary statement with differential or provisional diagnosis

Quick differential builders

Unilateral white lung
  • Massive pleural effusion (most common)
  • Complete lung collapse
  • Consolidation (extensive pneumonia)
  • Large mass
Bilateral upper zone opacities
  • Tuberculosis
  • Sarcoidosis
  • Silicosis
  • Ankylosing spondylitis
Bilateral lower zone opacities
  • Aspiration
  • Pulmonary edema
  • Bilateral effusions
  • Interstitial lung disease (UIP, NSIP)
Multiple lung nodules
  • Metastases (most common)
  • Infection (septic emboli, abscesses)
  • Granulomas (TB, fungal)
  • Vasculitis (GPA)

Red flags requiring urgent action

  • Tension pneumothorax
  • Massive pulmonary embolism
  • Ruptured aortic aneurysm
  • Perforated viscus with free air
  • Mediastinal widening (trauma/dissection)