Systematic Approach to Chest X-Ray (CXR)

Chest X-ray (CXR) is the most commonly performed imaging study in radiology. Despite being a basic tool, subtle findings are often missed without a structured review. A systematic approach ensures no abnormality is overlooked.


πŸ“Œ Step 1: Technical Review (RIPE)

Before interpreting, always check image quality:

  • R – Rotation: Medial ends of clavicles equidistant from spinous processes.
  • I – Inspiration: At least 6 anterior or 10 posterior ribs visible.
  • P – Projection: PA vs AP film. AP magnifies heart size.
  • E – Exposure: Vertebral bodies just visible through heart shadow.

πŸ“Œ Step 2: Airway & Mediastinum

  • Trachea: Midline or deviated?
  • Carina & bronchi: Sharp angle, obstruction?
  • Mediastinum: Widened? Mass? Vascular contour?

πŸ“Œ Step 3: Breathing (Lungs & Pleura)

  • Lung zones: Compare upper, middle, lower zones.
  • Look for:
    • Consolidation.
    • Collapse/atelectasis (volume loss, shift).
    • Interstitial markings (fibrosis, edema).
    • Nodules or masses.
  • Pleura: Effusion (blunting of costophrenic angles), pneumothorax (absence of lung markings, visible pleural line).

πŸ“Œ Step 4: Circulation (Heart & Great Vessels)

  • Heart size: Cardiothoracic ratio > 0.5 (on PA film) = cardiomegaly.
  • Borders: Right atrium, left ventricle, left atrial appendage, ascending aorta, pulmonary artery.
  • Pulmonary vasculature: Prominence, redistribution, cephalization.

πŸ“Œ Step 5: Diaphragm

  • Right usually higher than left (by <3 cm).
  • Look for free subdiaphragmatic air (perforation).
  • Blunting of costophrenic and cardiophrenic angles.

πŸ“Œ Step 6: Everything Else

  • Bones: Ribs, clavicles, spine for fractures or lesions.
  • Soft tissues: Neck, chest wall, breast shadows.
  • Devices: Tubes, lines, pacemakers, prostheses.

⚑ Teaching Pearls

  • Use the ABCDE (Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Diaphragm, Everything else) approach every time.
  • Always compare with old films for progression or resolution.
  • A poor-quality CXR can mimic disease (rotation β†’ apparent mediastinal shift, underexposure β†’ false consolidation).

πŸ—‚οΈ Flowchart: Systematic CXR Approach (ABCDE)

Start with Technical Quality (RIPE):

  • Rotation β†’ Clavicles symmetrical
  • Inspiration β†’ β‰₯6 anterior ribs
  • Projection β†’ PA vs AP
  • Exposure β†’ Spine just visible behind heart

➑️ A – Airway

  • Trachea midline?
  • Carina visible?
  • Mediastinum widened?

➑️ B – Breathing (Lungs & Pleura)

  • Compare zones (upper, middle, lower)
  • Consolidation, collapse, nodules?
  • Pleural effusion or pneumothorax?

➑️ C – Circulation (Heart & Vessels)

  • Heart size (CTR < 0.5 on PA)
  • Borders well-defined?
  • Pulmonary vasculature normal?

➑️ D – Diaphragm

  • Right > left (by <3 cm)
  • Costophrenic/cardiophrenic angles sharp?
  • Free air below diaphragm?

➑️ E – Everything Else

  • Bones: ribs, clavicle, spine
  • Soft tissues: neck, chest wall, breasts
  • Devices: tubes, lines, prostheses

βœ… Key takeaway:
Follow RIPE β†’ ABCDE to avoid missing subtle but life-threatening findings.

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