Interactive Transcript
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Okay, well, welcome here.
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Cardiopulmonary Mastery Series.
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We're going to keep going
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with the lateral radiograph.
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And the lateral radiograph, uh, it kind
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of intimidates a lot of radiologists,
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so we'll break it down and try and
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make it pretty easy here if we can.
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We're going to go through quickly just a little
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basic anatomy on the lateral and then learn
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about some pathologic processes that are actually
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better seen on the lateral than on the PA.
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And hopefully try to incorporate some sort of
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practical search pattern when you're presented
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with one of these lateral radiographs.
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So anatomically, it's set up where you've got
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the heart anteriorly, and you can actually see
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the three of the chambers really well, the right
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ventricle, which sits right behind the sternum,
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The left ventricle, which you see a little bit
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of the behind and up above it is the left atrium.
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Remember, the left atrium is actually
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above the left ventricle, not behind it.
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That's kind of how it's always
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shown, but it's above it.
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And then the other thing I want to show
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you is when you look at this, you want to
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identify the arch and the left main bronchus.
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And I'll show you why the left main bronchus
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on end, that's going to be really important.
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And then the trachea.
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Okay, so let me take you through it.
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I've highlighted some areas that I would
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like you to try to incorporate in your
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search pattern for the lateral radiograph.
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It is really amazing to find pleural
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effusions because that's the basement.
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The costophrenic angles in
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the PA is the first floor.
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You got to flood the basement back here
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before it spills over so looking for
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any blunting here enlarged hilar
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nodes I'll show you how to do that.
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This is really this is so much easier than
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the PA. Uh, low bar consolidation, lower lobe
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consolidation, you go down the vertebral bodies.
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They should get darker because you got more lung.
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Well, if you got a whiteness here,
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if that's interrupted, you have
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to have an explanation for that.
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Right ventricular enlargement, it sits right
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behind the sternum, one third of the, uh,
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one quarter to one third of the way up.
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As it dilates or hypertrophies, it
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crawls up into that retrosternal space.
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Uh, left ventricular will be right here.
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This is the left ventricle.
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There's your inferior vena cava.
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As it tends to dilate, it starts to sag backwards
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greater than two centimeters behind the sternum.
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IVC and the left atrium which is just above
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it will pooch out and when it's enlarged,
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Um, pericardial effusion, the so-called oreo
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sign. You look right here in the retrosternal
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area. You look at and you can find these
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pericardial effusions, the retrosternal fat
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and the epicardial fat. What's in between
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it shouldn't be more than four millimeters.
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And the last one you may not have been
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taught about is the so-called retrotracheal
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triangle right here above the arch in front
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of the vertebral body behind the trachea.
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There should be absolutely nothing in here.
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Nothing in here.
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This was described by Louis Rader.
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It's called Rader's triangle, but you
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know, retrotracheal triangle, if you wish.
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So, looking here.
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Perception.
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This person has a cough.
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Well, there might be something here.
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I think there is.
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It's ill-defined.
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There's some air bronchograms.
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I don't see the vessels very well.
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But when you look back here,
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you say, "Oh, there it is."
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You go down the vertebral bodies.
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They're not getting darker here.
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They're whiter at this level.
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This is a left lower lobe consolidated pneumonia.
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Again, the lateral projection, very
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helpful when you have your search pattern.
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The search pattern is going down the
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vertebral body and taking a look behind
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the heart, behind the heart as well.
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And um, this is a nice area where you
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can pick up a lot of pneumonias that may
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be behind the diaphragm or behind the
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heart and not so conspicuous on the PA.
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This is Raider's triangle or
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the retrotracheal triangle.
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There should be absolutely nothing in here.
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So when you see something like this, okay.
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That's not normal.
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That needs an explanation.
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In this case, this is a, uh, large aberrant
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right subclavian artery with a ductus
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of comoral aneurysm, and it's filling
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in that retrosternal triangle, and it's
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even deviating the trachea anteriorly.
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If you see any nodule, overlying this.
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That needs an explanation.
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It might be sitting right behind the
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clavicle in the PA and not conspicuous.
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Patient with achalasia.
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Well, it's kind of subtle here.
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There's a subtle air-fluid
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level, but boy, not subtle here.
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That retrosternal, um, sorry, that
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retrotracheal, um, triangle is completely filled.
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And so again, part of your search pattern.
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And then let's get to the hilum.
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The hilum is a lot easier, I think, on the lateral
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when it's enlarged lymph nodes than the PA.
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You see, the left main bronchus comes about
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perpendicular, and then this is it on, uh,
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on end, and that's what it is right here.
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This central lucency is seen
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about 95 percent of the time.
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That's your starting point.
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That's central lucency.
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Identify it on every lateral.
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From there, the right pulmonary artery,
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which is seen on end, over here, is actually
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represented by this oblong white area.
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So it kind of looks like they're
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next to each other, but they're not.
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That's normal, lucency, white, kind of
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oblong, circular region, pulmonary artery.
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This is not normal.
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There is your central lucency, and when you
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have that right pulmonary artery opacity
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that goes all the way around it, like
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a donut or a bagel, that is adenopathy.
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That's adenopathy.
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This is what it looks like normally.
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There's your right pulmonary artery.
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Same patient and it's that's a donut, that's
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adenopathy, and it's even mild adenopathy
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will pick up on the lateral as long as
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you know what to look for and where to
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start, left main bronchus lucency.
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Is there white all the way around it?
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There is adenopathy.
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Pleural effusions, the lateral costophrenic angle,
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this is where you get taught, is there blunting?
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Well, this takes about, you know, cc's
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to blunt, but this one can 30 to 50
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cc's and you start seeing it already.
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So pleural effusion will flood the posterior
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basement costophrenic angle on the lateral
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projection before it manifests on the PA.
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Okay.
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Patient does have some blunting bilaterally,
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but you can see it very easily here.
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This is layering and quite
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simple, bilateral small effusions.
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This patient has a fairly large
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effusion, but look at the PA.
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It's really hard to see it.
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It's there, but it's much larger and you can
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really quantify it much better on the lateral.
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The other thing is that it's probably passive
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atelectasis in that right lower lobe.
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But what if they have a little fever?
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Well, you can tip them down.
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And so decubitus fuses are often taught, but
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most people do decubitus ruses incorrectly.
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They tip the same side as the effusion down.
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Why would you do that?
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Tip the opposite side down.
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So this is the same patient is here.
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With this questionable opacity is
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that atelectasis or consolidation.
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We tip the person down onto their opposite
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side middle left side, and that hyperinflates
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the right lung, and look, it disappeared.
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And we know the fluid is mobile because it's not
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there, it's all right along the mediastinum.
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So it's a layering of fusion
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with atelectasis in the right lower lobe.
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This patient did bilateral decubitus.
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This is the same side down as the effusion,
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and it's just a minimal effusion, but
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you can't read anything else here.
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But when we tip the person down on
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the right side, the consolidation
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within the left lower lobe manifested.
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So if it was atelectasis, it should pop open.
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If it doesn't, that's probably
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a consolidated pneumonia.
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And the effusion is a little
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reactive or paramagnetic effusion.
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Okay.
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Then the cardiac chambers, right
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ventricular enlargement, it will crawl up.
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Left atrial gives you a little
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bump here and the left ventricle.
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This is normal.
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There's your inferior vena cava.
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So this is mitral stenosis.
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with pulmonary hypertension
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and right heart enlargement.
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This is a patient who's got the left
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atrium as dilated and the left ventricle.
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Look, it's actually extended back to the spine.
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That's not normal.
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So both the left atrium and the
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left ventricle are both dilated.
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So chambers of the heart best
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evaluated on the lateral.
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What else can be?
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Well, this can be, this is the epidural fat.
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This is the retrosternal fat.
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That's more than four millimeters.
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That's a pericardial effusion.
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By the way, the echo done before
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this said there was no fusion.
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Yes, there is.
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Yes, there is.
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And you will miss this unless this
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is part of your search pattern.
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You look in the area of the heart anteriorly.
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Do you see something that looks like an Oreo?
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So, the lateral radiograph, extraordinarily
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helpful, especially with pleural effusions.
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Hilar adenopathy is excellent.
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Cardiac chambers, except the right atrium.
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Pericardial effusion.
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And lower lobe consolidation around atelectasis.
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And remember to always check
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the retrosternal triangle.
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There should be nothing in it.
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Try to incorporate these regions in
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your search pattern with the lateral
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radiograph and see what you turn out.
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Thank you.
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