Recognizing a Technically Adequate Chest Radiograph


  • This chapter will enable you to evaluate the technical adequacy of a chest x-ray by helping you become more familiar with the diagnostic pitfalls certain technical artifacts can introduce. This is important so that you don't mistake technical deficiencies for abnormalities.

Evaluating the Chest Radiograph for Technical Adequacy

  • Evaluating five technical factors will help you to determine if a chest radiograph is adequate for interpretation or whether certain artifacts may have been introduced which can lead you astray ( Table 2.1 ):

    • Penetration

    • Inspiration

    • Rotation

    • Magnification

    • Angulation

    TABLE 2.1
    What Defines a Technically Adequate Chest Radiograph?
    Factor What You Should See
    Penetration The spine through the heart
    Inspiration At least eight to nine posterior ribs
    Rotation Spinous process should fall equidistant between the medial ends of the clavicles
    Magnification Anteroposterior (AP) films (mostly portable chest x-rays) will magnify the heart slightly
    Angulation The clavicle normally has an ā€œSā€ shape and the medial end superimposes on the 3rd or 4th rib

Penetration

  • Unless x-rays adequately pass through the body part being studied, you may not visualize everything necessary on the image produced.

    • To determine if a frontal chest radiograph is adequately penetrated, you should be able to see the thoracic spine through the heart shadow ( Fig. 2.1 ).

      Fig. 2.1, Technically Adequate Normal Frontal Chest.

Dignostic Pitfalls

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