THE ANSWER FOR FRIDAYS Chest Medicine Challenge is C. Read The complete Rationale. Next Question will be posted on Friday.Bookmark this site for easy access.
A 72-year-old man is admitted for increased shortness of breath, a cough productive of yellow sputum with scant hemoptysis, left pleuritic chest pain, and low-grade fevers. His past medical history is notable for hypertension and diabetes. He has a history of 80 pack-years of tobacco use, and was a ship-yard worker while in the military. On physical examination, his temperature is 38°C and his lung examination reveals decreased breath sounds on the left. His frontal and lateral chest radiographs are shown in Figure 158-A and Figure 158-B. What do you expect to observe on the chest CT scan?
A. Left pleural effusion.
B. Left upper lobe (LUL) consolidation.
C. LUL collapse.
D. Pleural thickening.
B. Left upper lobe (LUL) consolidation.
C. LUL collapse.
D. Pleural thickening.
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This patient has developed complete LUL collapse as noted on the
CT scan in Figure 158-C (choice C is correct).
Careful review of the plain
frontal chest radiograph illustrates the main features of complete LUL
collapse. The LUL is bigger than the right upper lobe due to the usual lack of
a minor fissure on the left. When the LUL collapses, it tends to collapse
anteriorly and somewhat superiorly and medially. On the frontal chest
radiograph, there is a left hazy opacity/density in the upper left lung field
(see Fig 158-A), which is readily apparent when the upper hemithoraces are
compared. Due to volume loss, there is elevation of the left hemidiaphragm,
upward retraction of the left hilum, and sometimes tracheal deviation to the
left. The left pulmonary artery occupies the AP window. Because the lingula is
part of the LUL, it appears as a hazy opacity silhouetting the left heart
border, resulting in obscuration of this border.
Sometimes, vessels from the lower lobe can be seen presenting as
linear opacities running vertically on the radiograph. The hyperexpanded left
lower lobe (LLL) occupies the hemithorax, and the superior segment occupies the
apical region of the hemithorax appearing as aerated lung. Sometimes, but not well
demonstrated in this patient, there is a portion of the superior segment of the
left lower lobe between the mediastinum and the collapsed left upper lobe
abutting the arch of the aorta. The luftsichel, or air crescent sign is the
name given to the appearance of aerated lung in this area. Alternatively, there
may be loss of a discrete left mediastinal border, and obliteration of the
aortic contour.
The chest CT scan illustrates the complete LUL collapse, showing
the collapse anteriorly and medially with anterior displacement of the left
major fissure. An endobronchial cut off sign of the LUL bronchus consistent
with obstruction is noted (Fig 158-C, arrow). Bronchoscopy revealed an
extrinsic endobronchial lesion, and pathologic findings revealed small cell
carcinoma in this patient. The findings of LUL collapse can sometime be
confused with pleural thickening because of the density and the nonsegmental
borders, but careful review of the other radiographic features suggest LUL
collapse (choice D is incorrect). A left pleural effusion, even if loculated,
would appear denser, and one would not see superimposed lung markings (choice A
is incorrect). Consolidation would appear dense with air bronchograms (choice B
is incorrect).
Proto AV. Lobar collapse: basic concepts. Eur J Radiol.
1996;23(1):9-22.
Mintzer RA, Sakowicz BA, Blonder JA. Lobar collapse: usual and
unusual forms. Chest. 1988;94(3):615-620.
Woodring JH, Reed JC. Radiographic
manifestations of lobar atelectasis. J Thorac Imaging. 1996;11(2):109-144.
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