Pulmonary Embolus
General Features in Pulmonary Embolus
In embolus, the chest x-ray is not normally helpful, so I haven't shown one here. It can be useful to exclude other pathology. Rarely, the x-ray may show atelectasis, consolidation, or a small pleural effusion. There may be prominent hilar vessels or decreased peripheral vessels, but this is also rare.
Nuclear medicine Ventilation/Perfusion scans are the way to go on this one.
Back to Case 10: Pneumothorax
Forward to Case 12: Cardiac Imaging in Disease
Return to Radiology for Medical Students Index
Take Home Points
Those of you who have slogged it out to the end of the "Lungs" section I deserve a bonus before carrying on to the deliciously brief "Cardiac Imaging in Disease." Here it is:
- For infiltrative processes, pneumonia, tumor CXR is sensitive, but not specific
- For obstructive airway disease, CXR is not particularly sensitive, but can exclude complications such as pneumonia
- For Heart Failure, CXR is helpful, but often difficult to interpret
- Pneumonia, tumor, embolus are usually focal
- COPD, CHF, Interstitial lung disease are usually diffuse
P.S. Real men hand-code HTML in Notepad, baby! Deal with it.
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