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Introduction: Chest Pain

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I wanna provide a framework for thinking about chest pain. So as you're

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looking at images, it's helpful to think about what are the common causes

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of chest pain, and these include, and they're not limited to,

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myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, aortic dissection, pericarditis,

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costochondritis, pneumonia, or there may be other things. But as you begin

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to think about things that could cause chest pain, it may direct your

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pattern for questions to answer. As you think about

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imaging, here are some things that are listed. Now, not all of these

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are indicated in every single instance, and some of these may not be

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helpful in all instances. But generally speaking, PA and lateral chest radiographs

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are very good screening tools. They're very common in the ED.

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You will get comfortable because you'll be exposed to lots and lots and

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lots of PA and lateral chest radiographs. The CTPA or the chest CT

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for PE, or chest CTs with contrast, we're using those interchangeably.

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And those, again, will give you information not just about whether or not

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there is embolism, but depending on the protocol,

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you can get information around aortic dissection, you'll be able to look

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at the pericardium, you'll be able to look at the bones,

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look at the lung parenchyma, things of that nature, and you may be

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able to see enhancement of the myocardial tissue in cases where there's

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acute infarc. So, lots of things that can be shown there.

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Again, CTA of the coronary arteries is very focused looking at the coronary

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arteries, when there's a question of myocardial infarction or myocardial

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ischemia. This is something that can be done in the ER.

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There are many other tests that may preclude this exam, so you may

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not see this very frequently. EKGs and myocardial perfusion are, again,

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imaging that gets done. Generally, for patients who are coming through the

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ED, it may not necessarily be done in the acute time period,

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but you may begin to see patients who have this as follow up.

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In terms of some Pearls, think about... Again, the Wells criteria is an

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excellent tool for determining which patients need to actually be imaged

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if you're suspecting PE, but not all patients who have chest pain or

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who shortness of breath will have PE or should have the Wells criteria

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applied to them. So really, you need to have a high suspicion of

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veno occlusive disease and a history of physical examination that would

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suggest that this is a high likelihood and that those patients should undergo

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the Wells criteria, and then be determined to go into

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chest CT for PE. Now, I will say that for many patients who

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come down the chest CT for PE category, what we began to see

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is there are many alternative reasons for patients with shortness of breath.

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So the cases of pneumonia that we don't see on X ray certainly

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does happen. So there may be other diagnoses that while providers are saying,

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"Does this patient have a PE?" they're actually asking for other types of

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diagnoses that are listed here, so things like pneumonia, things like pericarditis,

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things like dissection. So keep that in mind to be very broad in

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your differential and to be inclusive.

Report

Faculty

Jamlik-Omari Johnson, MD, FASER

Chair, Department of Radiology

University of Southern California

Tags

X-Ray (Plain Films)

Trauma

Syndromes

Pleural

Lungs

Infectious

Idiopathic

Iatrogenic

Emergency

Chest

CT

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