Adult Chest X-Rays Of The Month
Daniel Escobar, MD, Angela Pikus, MD,
Alex Blackwell, MD
Department of Emergency Medicine
Carolinas Medical Center & Levine Children’s Hospital
Michael Gibbs, MD - Faculty Editor
CMC Imaging Mastery Project
December 2021
Disclosures
 This ongoing chest X-ray interpretation series is proudly sponsored by the
Emergency Medicine Residency Program at Carolinas Medical Center.
 The goal is to promote widespread mastery of CXR interpretation.
 There is no personal health information [PHI] within, and ages have been
changed to protect patient confidentiality.
Visit Our Website
www.EMGuidewire.com
For A Complete Archive Of Imaging Presentations And Much More!
Airway
Bones
Cardiac
Diaphragm
Effusion
Foreign body
Gastric
Hilum
It’s All About The Anatomy!
Case #1
63-Year-Old
Male Involved
In A High-
Speed MVC.
He Complains
Of Back Pain
And Right-
Sided Chest
Pain.
Case #1
63-Year-Old
Male Involved
In A High-
Speed MVC.
He Complains
Of Back Pain
And Right-
Sided Chest
Pain.
Haziness Of The Right Lower Lung Fields
Right Hemothorax
In The Supine Patient A
Hemothorax May Appear Only
As “Haziness” On The CXR
Our Patient Had 500 cc Of Bloody
Chest Tube Output Following Tube
Insertion In The ED.
Case #2
25-Year-Old
Male Involved
In A High-
Speed MVC
With Roll-Over.
Case #2
25-Year-Old
Male Involved
In A High-
Speed MVC
With Roll-Over.
Haziness Of The Left Lower Lung Fields
Case #2: 25-Year-Old Male Involved In A High-Speed MVC With Roll-Over.
Severe Pulmonary Contusions
Dr. Escobar’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: December Cases
EAST Guidelines For The Management Of Pulmonary Contusion & Flail Chest
 The use of optimal analgesia and aggressive chest physiotherapy should be used to
minimize the risk of respiratory failure.
 A trial of mask CPAP in combination with optimal regional anesthesia, should be
considered in alert, compliant patients with marginal respiratory status.
 Epidural catheter is the preferred method of analgesia delivery.
 Patients should be adequately resuscitated, and hypovolemia should be avoided. When
there are clear signs of hydrostatic fluid overload, diuretics may be used.
 Steroids should not be used in patients with pulmonary contusion.
 For patients requiring mechanical ventilation, PEEP and CPAP should be part in the
ventilatory strategy.
A Recent Outpatient CT Scan Reveals A Compression Fracture Of L4
An MRI Obtained In The ED Reveals A Lytic Lesion of L4 With Soft Tissue Extension
Case #3
A 71-Year-Old
Female Is
Referred To
The ED With
Low Back Pain
And An
“Abnormal
Spine CT.”
Case #3: The ED Team Orders A Screening Chest X-Ray
*
*
Large Right Lower Lobe Density (*)
Case #3: The ED Team Orders A Screening Chest X-Ray
*
* *
Chest CT Imaging Reveals A Right
Lower Lobe Lung Mass
Dx: Squamous Cell Lung Cancer
Relative Incidence
Breast 65%-75%
Prostate 65%-75%
Thyroid 60%
Lung 30%-40%
Bladder 40%
Renal Cell 20%-25%
Melanoma 15%-45%
Bone metastases are a major cause of morbidity, characterized by pain, impaired mobility,
pathologic fractures, spinal cord compression, bone marrow aplasia, and hypercalcemia.
Based On These Incidences, Once You Have Identified A
Bone Metastases What Might Your Do In The ED1 To
Help Zero In On The Primary Malignancy?
Physical Exam
• Breast exam
• Prostate exam
• Neck exam
• Skin exam
Testing
• Chest X-ray
• CBC, metabolic package
• PSA in males (send)
1Additional laboratory & imaging studies should be done outpatient
Case #4a
A 25-Year-Old Male
With Diabetes
Presents With
Symptoms Of
Hyperglycemia And
Multiple Episodes
On Non-Bilious
Vomiting.
Case #4a
A 25-Year-Old Male
With Diabetes
Presents With
Symptoms Of
Hyperglycemia And
Multiple Episodes
On Non-Bilious
Vomiting.
Pneumomediastinum
Pneumomediastinum
What Do You See?
Case #4b
A 91-year-old-
female presents to
the Emergency
Department with
sudden onset of
hoarseness.
T-98, BP- 110/84,
HR- 82, SpO2- 96%
The physical exam
reveals crepitus
throughout the
anterior chest and
neck.
The Image On The Right Is A Prior CXR
From The Same Patient For Comparison
Arrows Pointing To Tracking Free Air
Case #4b
The diffuse tracking of free
air leads to four of several
classic findings of
pneumomediastinum:
Extrapleural Air (Red)
Extending up into the neck
Emphysema (Yellow)
Crepitus on exam
Tubular Artery Sign
Blue arrow
Pneumopericardium
Purple arrow
Common Signs and Symptoms:
Shortness of breath, chest and/or, neck pain, sore throat, dysphagia, voice changes
Common Physical Exam Findings:
Palpable subcutaneous crepitus
Hamman’s Sign (an auscultatory crunch or clicking sound heard synchronously with each heartbeat)
First, let’s review
mediastinal anatomy!
The mediastinum is
structurally divided
into Superior &
Inferior
Compartments, along
the Sternal Angle
The Inferior
Compartment is
further divided into
Anterior, Middle, and
Posterior divisions
Subcutaneous Emphysema
Free air that tracks through the soft tissues
leading to physical exam findings of crepitus
Thymic (“Spinnaker”)Sail Sign
Both lobes of the thymus become displaced
from center by mediastinal free air
Normal Thymic Appearance Spinnaker Sail Of A Ship
Pneumomediastinum Thymic Appearance
Pneumopericardium
Mediastinal air fills the pericardial sac and surround
the heart (Arrow 1). Arrow 2 points to a chest tube.
Ring Around The Artery Sign
As visualized on LATERAL view, air surrounds
the pulmonary artery and/or its main branches
Tubular Artery Sign
Air surrounds the major branches of the
aorta, more clearly defining them
Double Bronchial Wall Sign
With air within the main bronchi and free air
surrounding the outside of the bronchi, you can
more crisply visualize both walls of each bronchi
Continuous Diaphragm Sign
Mediastinum air tracks behind the pericardium
giving the illusion of a continuous line crossing
the diaphragmatic surfaces
Extrapleural Sign
Air is entrapped within the mediastinum and
extends along the parietal pleura and diaphragm,
creating a line that parallels the descending aorta
Pneumomediastinum ED
Management Literature Review
References
Article Info
Related Articles
This paper is only available as a PDF. To read,
Please Download here.
Study objective:
To evaluate the clinical characteristics and natural history of
patients presenting with spontaneous pneumomediastinum.
Design:
A retrospective case series was conducted to identify patients
diagnosed with spontaneous pneumomediastinum. ICD-9
discharge codes were used for 1984 to 1990 at two institutions,
and emergency department records of a third hospital were
reviewed for 1981 to 1986. Clinical features, interventions,
complications, setting, etiology, symptoms, and length of
hospital stay were recorded.
Spontaneous pneumomediastinum: Clinical and natural
history
• • • •
DOI:
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION | VOLUME 21, ISSUE 10, P1222-1227, OCTOBER 01, 1992 !
Purchase
"
Subscribe
#
Save
$
Sha
MD Edward A Panacek + MD Andrew J Singer MD Bruce W Sherman PAC Amanda Prescott
MD William F Rutherford
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0196-0644(05)81750-0
'
Single-center retrospective cases series examining the cause and
outcomes of 17 ED patients presenting with pneumomediastinum.
Chest Pain 47%
Dyspnea 18%
Hamman’s Crunch 52%
Illicit Inhalation Drugs 76%
Valsalva Maneuver 70%
14 patients were admitted for a period of observation and none
suffered any complications or required any interventions.
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
Conclusions
Spontaneous pneumomediastinum:
• A benign condition seen primarily in younger adults that is associated
with an uneventful recovery and unlikely recurrence
• In most cases the presentation involves chest pain, dyspnea, cough,
and/or subcutaneous emphysema
• The diagnosis requires a high index of suspicion because 30% of
patients present without any precipitating factors and 30% of patients
will have a normal initial chest X-ray
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
Conclusions
Secondary pneumomediastinum, that had a 39% mortality in this
study, is associated with:
• An older age at presentation
• A higher prevalence of associated pneumothorax
• A higher requirement for tube thoracostomy drainage
• The presence of a pleural effusion
• Longer hospital stays
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
Patient #1
52-year-old admitted with dyspnea, fever, cough. He was initially started on non-invasive
ventilation but worsened and required endotracheal intubation. Post-intubation reveal
consolidation and pneumomediastinum [Fig 1a]. He improved with supportive care.
Patient #2
68-year-old admitted with dyspnea requiring increasing CPAP support. Following intubation
imaging reveals pneumomediastinum with widespread extension. He did develop a
pneumothorax requiring drainage. He subsequently improved with complete resolution.
Patient #3
66-year-old requiring admission and early intubation. Chest X-ray revealed extensive
pneumomediastinum. Serial CXR confirmed gradual resolution.
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
Discussion
• In the patient with COVID-19, pneumomediastinum appears to be the
consequence of the high PEEP required to maintain oxygenation.
• In this case series all patient had gradual resolution of their
pneumomediastinum.
• While the patient is intubated, serial chest X-rays are recommended
to monitor for the possibility of iatrogenic pneumothorax.
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
Pneumomediastinum
2° Iatrogenic 2° Medical & Traumatic Spontaneous
 Endoscopic procedures
 Intubation
 Pleural instrumentation
 Central vascular procedure
 Chest/abdominal surgery
 Blunt chest injury
 Penetrating chest injury
 Asthma/COPD
 Bronchiectasis
 Interstitial lung disease
 Thoracic malignancy
 Tobacco use
 Recreational drugs
 Breath holding
 Weight-lifting
Management Essentials
 Manage the underlying cause
 Pain management & cough suppression as indicated
 Oxygen may increase gas absorption in severe cases
 Advanced imaging (e.g.: esophagram) not routinely required
 Brief period of observation vs. close outpatient follow-up
Carolinas Medical Center
Pneumomediastinum Case Studies
Gunshot
Wound To
The Neck
With
Tracheal And
Esophageal
Injury
Pneumomediastinum & Pneumopericardium
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
Gunshot
Wound To
The Neck
With
Tracheal And
Esophageal
Injury
Pneumomediastinum & Pneumopericardium
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
Healthy 13-Year-Old With Throat And Upper Chest Pain
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
Pneumomediastinum & Pneumopericardium
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
Pneumomediastinum & Pneumopericardium
Healthy 13-Year-Old With Throat And Upper Chest Pain
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
Pneumomediastinum
25-Year-Old With Intractable Vomiting
www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
25-Year-Old With Intractable Vomiting
Pneumomediastinum
Summary Of Diagnoses This Week
• Blunt Hemothorax
• Pulmonary Contusion
• Lung Cancer With Bone Metastases
• Pneumomediastinum & Pneumopericardium
See You Next Month!

More Related Content

PPTX
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Spontaneous Pneumothorax
PPTX
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
PPTX
Drs. Lena, Avery, and Davis’s CMC Abdominal Imaging Mastery Project: March Cases
PPTX
Dr. Michael Gibbs's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: June cases
PDF
Enf neuromusculares con fallo respiratorio
PPTX
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Peripartum Cardiomyopathy
PPTX
Drs. Lorenzen and Barlock’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: September Cases
PPTX
Drs. Escobar, Pikus, and Blackwell’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: January Cases
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Spontaneous Pneumothorax
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Drs. Lena, Avery, and Davis’s CMC Abdominal Imaging Mastery Project: March Cases
Dr. Michael Gibbs's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: June cases
Enf neuromusculares con fallo respiratorio
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Peripartum Cardiomyopathy
Drs. Lorenzen and Barlock’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: September Cases
Drs. Escobar, Pikus, and Blackwell’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: January Cases

What's hot (20)

PPTX
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Stress-Induced Cardiomyopathy
PPTX
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: April Cases
PPTX
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Septic Pulmonary Emboli
PPTX
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: June Cases
PPTX
Drs. Lena, Avery, and Davis’s CMC Abdominal Imaging Mastery Project: August C...
PPTX
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Pericardial Effusion
PPTX
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room on Pediatric Adult Aortic Coarctation
PPTX
Dr. Cravens CMC Implanted Device Imaging Mastery Project: ICD Cases
PPTX
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: November Cases
PPTX
Drs. Potter and Richardson's CMC Pediatric X-Ray Mastery November Cases
PPTX
Drs. Lorenzen and Barlock’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: January Cases
PPTX
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: May Cases
PPTX
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Lung Cancer
PPTX
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Pneumonia
PPTX
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Blunt Aortic Injury
PPTX
Drs. Lorenzen and Barlock’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: October Cases
PPTX
Drs. Potter and Richardson's CMC Pediatric X-Ray Mastery: April Cases
PPTX
Drs. Penzler, Ricker, and Ahmad’s CMC Abdominal Imaging Mastery Project: Nove...
PPTX
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: August Cases
PPTX
Drs. Milam, Thomas, Lorenzen, and Barlock’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: August...
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Stress-Induced Cardiomyopathy
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: April Cases
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Septic Pulmonary Emboli
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: June Cases
Drs. Lena, Avery, and Davis’s CMC Abdominal Imaging Mastery Project: August C...
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Pericardial Effusion
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room on Pediatric Adult Aortic Coarctation
Dr. Cravens CMC Implanted Device Imaging Mastery Project: ICD Cases
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: November Cases
Drs. Potter and Richardson's CMC Pediatric X-Ray Mastery November Cases
Drs. Lorenzen and Barlock’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: January Cases
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: May Cases
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Lung Cancer
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Pneumonia
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Blunt Aortic Injury
Drs. Lorenzen and Barlock’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: October Cases
Drs. Potter and Richardson's CMC Pediatric X-Ray Mastery: April Cases
Drs. Penzler, Ricker, and Ahmad’s CMC Abdominal Imaging Mastery Project: Nove...
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: August Cases
Drs. Milam, Thomas, Lorenzen, and Barlock’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: August...

Similar to Dr. Escobar’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: December Cases (20)

PPTX
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Pneumomediastinum
PPTX
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: January Cases
PPTX
Drs. Escobar, Pikus, and Blackwell’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: February Cases
PPTX
Drs. Pikus, Blackwell, Baumgarten, and Malloy-Posts’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Proje...
PPTX
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: July cases
PPTX
Dr. Michael Gibbs's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project - Week #6 Cases
PPTX
Dr. Michael Gibbs's CMC X Ray Mastery Project - Week #9 Cases
PDF
A rare case of hamman syndrome with pneumomediastinum
PPTX
CHEST IMAGING deataied lecture on Radiological investigations of the chest
PPTX
Dr. Michael Gibbs's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: Week #10 cases
PDF
5-Differential diagnosis chest pains.pdf
PPTX
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: December Cases
PPTX
Chest Interpretation Year 3 REVISED
PDF
Disease of mediastum (thoracic surgery) pdf
PPTX
Drs. Lorenzen and Escobar’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: August Cases
PPT
Mediastnum ppt
PPTX
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: July Cases
PPTX
mediatinum final radiology 1 st year.pptx
PPTX
Pneumothorax case presentation
PPTX
Pneumomediastinum
EMGuideWire's Radiology Reading Room: Pneumomediastinum
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: January Cases
Drs. Escobar, Pikus, and Blackwell’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: February Cases
Drs. Pikus, Blackwell, Baumgarten, and Malloy-Posts’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Proje...
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: July cases
Dr. Michael Gibbs's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project - Week #6 Cases
Dr. Michael Gibbs's CMC X Ray Mastery Project - Week #9 Cases
A rare case of hamman syndrome with pneumomediastinum
CHEST IMAGING deataied lecture on Radiological investigations of the chest
Dr. Michael Gibbs's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: Week #10 cases
5-Differential diagnosis chest pains.pdf
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: December Cases
Chest Interpretation Year 3 REVISED
Disease of mediastum (thoracic surgery) pdf
Drs. Lorenzen and Escobar’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: August Cases
Mediastnum ppt
Drs. Milam and Thomas's CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: July Cases
mediatinum final radiology 1 st year.pptx
Pneumothorax case presentation
Pneumomediastinum

More from Sean M. Fox (20)

PDF
Knee Extensor Mechanism Injuries - Orthopedic Radiologic Imaging
PDF
Neurocysticercosis - Neuro Imaging Master Series
PDF
Intraventricular Rupture of Brain Abscess (IVROBA).pdf
PDF
Neuro Imaging Case Study - Nail Gun Injury
PDF
Shoulder Dislocations - Orthopedic Radiologic Imaging
PPTX
Neuroimaging Mastery Project: Presentation #6 Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
PPTX
Implanted Devices - VP Shunts: EMGuidewire's Radiology Reading Room
PPTX
Sternal Fractures & Dislocations - EMGuidewire Radiology Reading Room
PPTX
Diaphragmatic Injuries - Radiology Reading Room
PPTX
Acute Chest Syndrome - EMGuidewire's Radiology Reading Room
PPTX
Adult Orthopedic Imaging Series: Presentation #2 Native Hip Dislocations
PPTX
Neuroimaging Mastery Project: Presentation #5 Subdural Hematomas
PPTX
Neuroimaging Mastery Project Presentation #4: Acute Epidural Hematomas
PPTX
Pediatric Orthopedic Imaging Case Studies #7 Pediatric Elbow Fractures
PPTX
Adult Orthopedic Imaging Mastery Project - Pelvic Ring Fractures
PPTX
Neurosurgical Intracranial Infections - FINAL 10-17-23.pptx
PPTX
CMC Neuroimaging Case Studies - Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis
PPTX
Abdominal Imaging Case Studies #27.pptx
PPTX
Blood Can Be Very Very Bad - CMC Neuroimaging Case Studies
PPTX
Adult Chest X-Rays Of The Month - #46
Knee Extensor Mechanism Injuries - Orthopedic Radiologic Imaging
Neurocysticercosis - Neuro Imaging Master Series
Intraventricular Rupture of Brain Abscess (IVROBA).pdf
Neuro Imaging Case Study - Nail Gun Injury
Shoulder Dislocations - Orthopedic Radiologic Imaging
Neuroimaging Mastery Project: Presentation #6 Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
Implanted Devices - VP Shunts: EMGuidewire's Radiology Reading Room
Sternal Fractures & Dislocations - EMGuidewire Radiology Reading Room
Diaphragmatic Injuries - Radiology Reading Room
Acute Chest Syndrome - EMGuidewire's Radiology Reading Room
Adult Orthopedic Imaging Series: Presentation #2 Native Hip Dislocations
Neuroimaging Mastery Project: Presentation #5 Subdural Hematomas
Neuroimaging Mastery Project Presentation #4: Acute Epidural Hematomas
Pediatric Orthopedic Imaging Case Studies #7 Pediatric Elbow Fractures
Adult Orthopedic Imaging Mastery Project - Pelvic Ring Fractures
Neurosurgical Intracranial Infections - FINAL 10-17-23.pptx
CMC Neuroimaging Case Studies - Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis
Abdominal Imaging Case Studies #27.pptx
Blood Can Be Very Very Bad - CMC Neuroimaging Case Studies
Adult Chest X-Rays Of The Month - #46

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Physical pharmaceutics two in b pharmacy
PPTX
Copy of ARAL Program Primer_071725(1).pptx
PDF
FYJC - Chemistry textbook - standard 11.
PPTX
Diploma pharmaceutics notes..helps diploma students
PPSX
namma_kalvi_12th_botany_chapter_9_ppt.ppsx
PDF
HSE 2022-2023.pdf الصحه والسلامه هندسه نفط
PDF
FAMILY PLANNING (preventative and social medicine pdf)
PDF
WHAT NURSES SAY_ COMMUNICATION BEHAVIORS ASSOCIATED WITH THE COMP.pdf
PDF
Horaris_Grups_25-26_Definitiu_15_07_25.pdf
PDF
Laparoscopic Imaging Systems at World Laparoscopy Hospital
PPTX
Neurological complocations of systemic disease
PDF
Jana Ojana 2025 Prelims - School Quiz by Pragya - UEMK Quiz Club
PPTX
UCSP Section A - Human Cultural Variations,Social Differences,social ChangeCo...
PPTX
GW4 BioMed Candidate Support Webinar 2025
PPTX
CHROMIUM & Glucose Tolerance Factor.pptx
PDF
Review of Related Literature & Studies.pdf
PPTX
Chapter-4-Rizal-Higher-Education-1-2_081545.pptx
PPTX
Single Visit Endodontics.pptx treatment in one visit
PPTX
Approach to a child with acute kidney injury
PPTX
Neurology of Systemic disease all systems
Physical pharmaceutics two in b pharmacy
Copy of ARAL Program Primer_071725(1).pptx
FYJC - Chemistry textbook - standard 11.
Diploma pharmaceutics notes..helps diploma students
namma_kalvi_12th_botany_chapter_9_ppt.ppsx
HSE 2022-2023.pdf الصحه والسلامه هندسه نفط
FAMILY PLANNING (preventative and social medicine pdf)
WHAT NURSES SAY_ COMMUNICATION BEHAVIORS ASSOCIATED WITH THE COMP.pdf
Horaris_Grups_25-26_Definitiu_15_07_25.pdf
Laparoscopic Imaging Systems at World Laparoscopy Hospital
Neurological complocations of systemic disease
Jana Ojana 2025 Prelims - School Quiz by Pragya - UEMK Quiz Club
UCSP Section A - Human Cultural Variations,Social Differences,social ChangeCo...
GW4 BioMed Candidate Support Webinar 2025
CHROMIUM & Glucose Tolerance Factor.pptx
Review of Related Literature & Studies.pdf
Chapter-4-Rizal-Higher-Education-1-2_081545.pptx
Single Visit Endodontics.pptx treatment in one visit
Approach to a child with acute kidney injury
Neurology of Systemic disease all systems

Dr. Escobar’s CMC X-Ray Mastery Project: December Cases

  • 1. Adult Chest X-Rays Of The Month Daniel Escobar, MD, Angela Pikus, MD, Alex Blackwell, MD Department of Emergency Medicine Carolinas Medical Center & Levine Children’s Hospital Michael Gibbs, MD - Faculty Editor CMC Imaging Mastery Project December 2021
  • 2. Disclosures  This ongoing chest X-ray interpretation series is proudly sponsored by the Emergency Medicine Residency Program at Carolinas Medical Center.  The goal is to promote widespread mastery of CXR interpretation.  There is no personal health information [PHI] within, and ages have been changed to protect patient confidentiality.
  • 3. Visit Our Website www.EMGuidewire.com For A Complete Archive Of Imaging Presentations And Much More!
  • 5. It’s All About The Anatomy!
  • 6. Case #1 63-Year-Old Male Involved In A High- Speed MVC. He Complains Of Back Pain And Right- Sided Chest Pain.
  • 7. Case #1 63-Year-Old Male Involved In A High- Speed MVC. He Complains Of Back Pain And Right- Sided Chest Pain. Haziness Of The Right Lower Lung Fields
  • 9. In The Supine Patient A Hemothorax May Appear Only As “Haziness” On The CXR Our Patient Had 500 cc Of Bloody Chest Tube Output Following Tube Insertion In The ED.
  • 10. Case #2 25-Year-Old Male Involved In A High- Speed MVC With Roll-Over.
  • 11. Case #2 25-Year-Old Male Involved In A High- Speed MVC With Roll-Over. Haziness Of The Left Lower Lung Fields
  • 12. Case #2: 25-Year-Old Male Involved In A High-Speed MVC With Roll-Over. Severe Pulmonary Contusions
  • 14. EAST Guidelines For The Management Of Pulmonary Contusion & Flail Chest  The use of optimal analgesia and aggressive chest physiotherapy should be used to minimize the risk of respiratory failure.  A trial of mask CPAP in combination with optimal regional anesthesia, should be considered in alert, compliant patients with marginal respiratory status.  Epidural catheter is the preferred method of analgesia delivery.  Patients should be adequately resuscitated, and hypovolemia should be avoided. When there are clear signs of hydrostatic fluid overload, diuretics may be used.  Steroids should not be used in patients with pulmonary contusion.  For patients requiring mechanical ventilation, PEEP and CPAP should be part in the ventilatory strategy.
  • 15. A Recent Outpatient CT Scan Reveals A Compression Fracture Of L4 An MRI Obtained In The ED Reveals A Lytic Lesion of L4 With Soft Tissue Extension Case #3 A 71-Year-Old Female Is Referred To The ED With Low Back Pain And An “Abnormal Spine CT.”
  • 16. Case #3: The ED Team Orders A Screening Chest X-Ray
  • 17. * * Large Right Lower Lobe Density (*) Case #3: The ED Team Orders A Screening Chest X-Ray
  • 18. * * * Chest CT Imaging Reveals A Right Lower Lobe Lung Mass Dx: Squamous Cell Lung Cancer
  • 19. Relative Incidence Breast 65%-75% Prostate 65%-75% Thyroid 60% Lung 30%-40% Bladder 40% Renal Cell 20%-25% Melanoma 15%-45% Bone metastases are a major cause of morbidity, characterized by pain, impaired mobility, pathologic fractures, spinal cord compression, bone marrow aplasia, and hypercalcemia. Based On These Incidences, Once You Have Identified A Bone Metastases What Might Your Do In The ED1 To Help Zero In On The Primary Malignancy? Physical Exam • Breast exam • Prostate exam • Neck exam • Skin exam Testing • Chest X-ray • CBC, metabolic package • PSA in males (send) 1Additional laboratory & imaging studies should be done outpatient
  • 20. Case #4a A 25-Year-Old Male With Diabetes Presents With Symptoms Of Hyperglycemia And Multiple Episodes On Non-Bilious Vomiting.
  • 21. Case #4a A 25-Year-Old Male With Diabetes Presents With Symptoms Of Hyperglycemia And Multiple Episodes On Non-Bilious Vomiting. Pneumomediastinum
  • 23. What Do You See? Case #4b A 91-year-old- female presents to the Emergency Department with sudden onset of hoarseness. T-98, BP- 110/84, HR- 82, SpO2- 96% The physical exam reveals crepitus throughout the anterior chest and neck.
  • 24. The Image On The Right Is A Prior CXR From The Same Patient For Comparison
  • 25. Arrows Pointing To Tracking Free Air Case #4b The diffuse tracking of free air leads to four of several classic findings of pneumomediastinum: Extrapleural Air (Red) Extending up into the neck Emphysema (Yellow) Crepitus on exam Tubular Artery Sign Blue arrow Pneumopericardium Purple arrow
  • 26. Common Signs and Symptoms: Shortness of breath, chest and/or, neck pain, sore throat, dysphagia, voice changes Common Physical Exam Findings: Palpable subcutaneous crepitus Hamman’s Sign (an auscultatory crunch or clicking sound heard synchronously with each heartbeat)
  • 27. First, let’s review mediastinal anatomy! The mediastinum is structurally divided into Superior & Inferior Compartments, along the Sternal Angle The Inferior Compartment is further divided into Anterior, Middle, and Posterior divisions
  • 28. Subcutaneous Emphysema Free air that tracks through the soft tissues leading to physical exam findings of crepitus
  • 29. Thymic (“Spinnaker”)Sail Sign Both lobes of the thymus become displaced from center by mediastinal free air Normal Thymic Appearance Spinnaker Sail Of A Ship Pneumomediastinum Thymic Appearance
  • 30. Pneumopericardium Mediastinal air fills the pericardial sac and surround the heart (Arrow 1). Arrow 2 points to a chest tube.
  • 31. Ring Around The Artery Sign As visualized on LATERAL view, air surrounds the pulmonary artery and/or its main branches
  • 32. Tubular Artery Sign Air surrounds the major branches of the aorta, more clearly defining them
  • 33. Double Bronchial Wall Sign With air within the main bronchi and free air surrounding the outside of the bronchi, you can more crisply visualize both walls of each bronchi
  • 34. Continuous Diaphragm Sign Mediastinum air tracks behind the pericardium giving the illusion of a continuous line crossing the diaphragmatic surfaces
  • 35. Extrapleural Sign Air is entrapped within the mediastinum and extends along the parietal pleura and diaphragm, creating a line that parallels the descending aorta
  • 37. References Article Info Related Articles This paper is only available as a PDF. To read, Please Download here. Study objective: To evaluate the clinical characteristics and natural history of patients presenting with spontaneous pneumomediastinum. Design: A retrospective case series was conducted to identify patients diagnosed with spontaneous pneumomediastinum. ICD-9 discharge codes were used for 1984 to 1990 at two institutions, and emergency department records of a third hospital were reviewed for 1981 to 1986. Clinical features, interventions, complications, setting, etiology, symptoms, and length of hospital stay were recorded. Spontaneous pneumomediastinum: Clinical and natural history • • • • DOI: ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION | VOLUME 21, ISSUE 10, P1222-1227, OCTOBER 01, 1992 ! Purchase " Subscribe # Save $ Sha MD Edward A Panacek + MD Andrew J Singer MD Bruce W Sherman PAC Amanda Prescott MD William F Rutherford https://doi.org/10.1016/S0196-0644(05)81750-0 ' Single-center retrospective cases series examining the cause and outcomes of 17 ED patients presenting with pneumomediastinum. Chest Pain 47% Dyspnea 18% Hamman’s Crunch 52% Illicit Inhalation Drugs 76% Valsalva Maneuver 70% 14 patients were admitted for a period of observation and none suffered any complications or required any interventions.
  • 40. Conclusions Spontaneous pneumomediastinum: • A benign condition seen primarily in younger adults that is associated with an uneventful recovery and unlikely recurrence • In most cases the presentation involves chest pain, dyspnea, cough, and/or subcutaneous emphysema • The diagnosis requires a high index of suspicion because 30% of patients present without any precipitating factors and 30% of patients will have a normal initial chest X-ray www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
  • 41. Conclusions Secondary pneumomediastinum, that had a 39% mortality in this study, is associated with: • An older age at presentation • A higher prevalence of associated pneumothorax • A higher requirement for tube thoracostomy drainage • The presence of a pleural effusion • Longer hospital stays www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
  • 46. Patient #1 52-year-old admitted with dyspnea, fever, cough. He was initially started on non-invasive ventilation but worsened and required endotracheal intubation. Post-intubation reveal consolidation and pneumomediastinum [Fig 1a]. He improved with supportive care. Patient #2 68-year-old admitted with dyspnea requiring increasing CPAP support. Following intubation imaging reveals pneumomediastinum with widespread extension. He did develop a pneumothorax requiring drainage. He subsequently improved with complete resolution. Patient #3 66-year-old requiring admission and early intubation. Chest X-ray revealed extensive pneumomediastinum. Serial CXR confirmed gradual resolution. www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
  • 48. Discussion • In the patient with COVID-19, pneumomediastinum appears to be the consequence of the high PEEP required to maintain oxygenation. • In this case series all patient had gradual resolution of their pneumomediastinum. • While the patient is intubated, serial chest X-rays are recommended to monitor for the possibility of iatrogenic pneumothorax. www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
  • 49. Pneumomediastinum 2° Iatrogenic 2° Medical & Traumatic Spontaneous  Endoscopic procedures  Intubation  Pleural instrumentation  Central vascular procedure  Chest/abdominal surgery  Blunt chest injury  Penetrating chest injury  Asthma/COPD  Bronchiectasis  Interstitial lung disease  Thoracic malignancy  Tobacco use  Recreational drugs  Breath holding  Weight-lifting Management Essentials  Manage the underlying cause  Pain management & cough suppression as indicated  Oxygen may increase gas absorption in severe cases  Advanced imaging (e.g.: esophagram) not routinely required  Brief period of observation vs. close outpatient follow-up
  • 51. Gunshot Wound To The Neck With Tracheal And Esophageal Injury Pneumomediastinum & Pneumopericardium www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
  • 52. Gunshot Wound To The Neck With Tracheal And Esophageal Injury Pneumomediastinum & Pneumopericardium www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020
  • 53. Healthy 13-Year-Old With Throat And Upper Chest Pain www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020 Pneumomediastinum & Pneumopericardium
  • 54. www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020 Pneumomediastinum & Pneumopericardium Healthy 13-Year-Old With Throat And Upper Chest Pain
  • 56. www.EMGuidewire.com. February 2020 25-Year-Old With Intractable Vomiting Pneumomediastinum
  • 57. Summary Of Diagnoses This Week • Blunt Hemothorax • Pulmonary Contusion • Lung Cancer With Bone Metastases • Pneumomediastinum & Pneumopericardium
  • 58. See You Next Month!

Editor's Notes

  • #27: https://pubs.rsna.org/doi/10.1148/radiographics.20.4.g00jl131043#F13
  • #38: A pernd