Low Attenuation (most radiolucent/black): Fat, Air.
Lung parenchyma: Has low attenuation and high penetration due to air content.
Chest X-ray Interpretation
Technique & Views
Standard Views: PA (Posterior-Anterior) and Lateral.
PA View: Taken on full inspiration. Standard distance (1.8m or 6ft) minimizes heart magnification.
AP View (Anterior-Posterior): Often portable, exaggerates heart size. Supine position alters fluid/air appearances.
Lateral View: Helps localize lesions, view retrosternal/retrocardiac spaces. Left hemidiaphragm often obscured anteriorly by the heart.
Anatomy & Signs
Hilum: Contains pulmonary arteries/veins, bronchi, lymph nodes. Left hilum is normally slightly higher than the right. Prominent hila can indicate adenopathy or pulmonary hypertension.
Heart Borders:
Right border = Right Atrium (adjacent to Middle Lobe).
Left border = Left Ventricle / Left Atrial Appendage (adjacent to Lingula/Upper Lobe).
Silhouette Sign:Loss of a normal interface (border) indicates pathology in the adjacent lung.
Right heart border loss = RML pathology.
Left heart border loss = Lingula (LUL) pathology.
Diaphragm loss = Lower lobe pathology.
Air Bronchogram: Visible air-filled bronchi surrounded by consolidated lung (e.g., pneumonia, edema). CT is more sensitive for detection. Not normally visible in peripheral lung.
Tension Pneumothorax:Mediastinal shift away from pneumothorax, ipsilateral hemidiaphragm depression. A medical emergency.
Supine: Air collects anteriorly, may be subtle (deep sulcus sign). CT is most sensitive for small pneumothorax.
Pulmonary Embolism (PE):Spiral CT Angiography is the imaging modality of choice. CXR often normal or shows non-specific signs (atelectasis, small effusion).
Lung Nodules: CXR insensitive for nodules <5mm. Peripheral calcified nodule usually benign. Signs favouring malignancy include size >8-10mm, irregular/spiculated border, growth.
Pneumoperitoneum: Free air under diaphragm on erect CXR. Best modality is often standing upright CXR/abdomen X-ray. Most common cause: perforated viscus (e.g., peptic ulcer).
Brain CT & MRI
Hemorrhage
Acute Hemorrhage:Hyperdense (bright) on non-contrast CT.
Epidural Hematoma (EDH):
Biconvex (lens) shape.
Often associated with skull fracture (temporal bone common).
Does NOT cross sutures. Arterial source common (middle meningeal artery).
Subdural Hematoma (SDH):
Crescent shape.
Crosses sutures, but not dural reflections (falx, tentorium). Venous source common.
Density varies with age: Acute = hyperdense, Subacute = isodense, Chronic = hypodense. Common in elderly and infants.
Intraventricular Hemorrhage: Blood within ventricles. Associated with poor prognosis.
Ischemia / Infarct
Acute Infarct:MRI with DWI is the most sensitive modality, shows restricted diffusion (hyperintense) within minutes to hours.
CT may be normal initially, later shows hypodensity in a vascular territory.
Vasogenic Edema: Extracellular fluid leakage (e.g., around tumors, inflammation). Appears as hypodensity on CT / T2 hyperintensity on MRI, often respecting white matter tracts.
Diffuse Brain Edema Signs on CT:
Effacement of sulci and basal cisterns.
Small ventricles.
Loss of grey-white matter differentiation.
Diffuse brain hypodensity.
Tumors
Intra-axial Tumors: Arise within brain parenchyma. Often enhance with T1+Contrast MRI.
Extra-axial Tumors: Arise from meninges, nerves, etc. (outside brain).
Failure to enhance makes intra-axial tumor less likely but does not exclude it.
Other
Calcification:CT is the best modality. Common sites: pineal gland, choroid plexus, falx, basal ganglia (age-related/pathologic).
Cavernous Sinus Thrombosis:MRV (MR Venography) is the investigation of choice.
Normal Hyperdensities on CT: Acute blood, IV contrast, calcification (physiologic/pathologic), bone. Pituitary gland is normally isodense.
Gastrointestinal System (GIS) Radiology
Contrast Studies
Barium:
Contraindicated in suspected perforation.
Excellent mucosal detail. Water insoluble.
Used for swallows, meals, follow-throughs, enemas.
Water-Soluble Contrast:
Used if perforation is suspected.
Low osmolality agents preferred. Less mucosal detail than barium.
Specific Conditions
Pneumoperitoneum: Free intraperitoneal air. Most common cause: perforated peptic ulcer. Best seen on erect CXR or left lateral decubitus abdomen X-ray.
Bowel Obstruction: Dilated loops of bowel proximal to obstruction, collapsed distally.
Crohn's Disease:Skip lesions, often affects terminal ileum (string sign), transmural inflammation, fistulas, abscesses. Strictures are common.
Ulcerative Colitis: Continuous mucosal inflammation starting in rectum. Loss of haustra (lead pipe colon). Strictures are uncommon. Increased cancer risk. No skip lesions.
Sigmoid Volvulus: Twisting of sigmoid colon. Coffee bean sign on AXR. Apex points to RUQ.
Liver Hemangioma:Most common benign liver tumor. Typically hyperechoic on US and T2 hyperintense on MRI.
Fibroadenoma: Common benign tumor, often oval, well-defined, may have popcorn calcification.
Fat Necrosis: Can occur post-trauma/surgery. May present as oil cyst (lucent with eggshell calcification) or mimic malignancy.
Cyst: Well-defined, round/oval. Appears as anechoic lesion with posterior acoustic enhancement on US. May have eggshell calcification if old.
Imaging in Young Women (<30-35):Ultrasound is the preferred initial imaging modality for a palpable lump.
Musculoskeletal (MSK) Radiology
Bone Lesions - General Features
Benign Signs:Well-defined margin, narrow zone of transition, sclerotic rim, geographic bone destruction, no cortical destruction, no aggressive periosteal reaction.
Malignant Signs:Ill-defined margin, wide zone of transition, permeative or moth-eaten bone destruction, cortical destruction, aggressive periosteal reaction (Codman's triangle, sunburst, lamellated), soft tissue extension.
Specific Bone Lesions
Benign:
Non-ossifying fibroma (NOF): Eccentric, metaphyseal, lytic, sclerotic border, bubbly appearance. Common in children/adolescents.
Enchondroma: Intramedullary cartilage tumor, often in hands/feet. May have calcification.
Giant Cell Tumor (GCT):Epiphyseal, lytic, geographic, abuts articular surface, usually no sclerotic rim. Can be locally aggressive.
Malignant:
Osteosarcoma:Metaphyseal, destructive, produces osteoid (bone matrix), aggressive periosteal reaction. Most common primary malignant bone tumor in adolescents.
Gout: Deposition of urate crystals. Punched-out erosions with sclerotic borders and overhanging edges. Tophi (soft tissue masses). Joint space preserved until late.
Septic Arthritis: Joint infection. Rapid joint destruction, effusion. Usually monoarticular.
Metabolic Bone Disease
Hyperparathyroidism:Subperiosteal bone resorption (classic sign, esp. radial aspect of phalanges), salt-and-pepper skull, brown tumors, Rugger Jersey spine.
Osteomalacia: Defective mineralization. Decreased bone density, Looser zones (pseudofractures).
Bone Scan
"Super Scan": Diffusely increased skeletal uptake with absent/faint kidney visualization. Seen in widespread metastatic disease, severe hyperparathyroidism, osteomalacia.
Three-Phase Bone Scan: Useful for evaluating osteomyelitis and complex regional pain syndrome.
Interventional Radiology
Vascular Procedures
Angiography: Imaging of blood vessels using contrast.
Digital Subtraction Angiography (DSA): Subtracts bone/soft tissue for better vessel visualization.
Femoral artery is the most common access site for systemic/aortic/cerebral angiography.
Femoral artery is lateral to the femoral vein.
Angioplasty/Stenting: Opening narrowed/occluded vessels. Better results in stenosis vs occlusion, and in larger vs smaller vessels.
Embolization: Blocking blood vessels (e.g., to treat bleeding, tumors, AVMs).
IVC Filter: Placed in Inferior Vena Cava (usually infrarenal) to prevent pulmonary embolism.
Indications: Contraindication to anticoagulation, failure of anticoagulation, complication (bleeding) on anticoagulation.
Complication: Can cause IVC thrombosis.
Non-Vascular Procedures
Biopsy: Image-guided (US or CT) tissue sampling.
US Guidance: Suitable for superficial/accessible lesions (liver, kidney, thyroid). General anesthesia often not required.
CT Guidance: Better for deep lesions (lung, retroperitoneum).
Percutaneous Nephrostomy: Placing a drainage tube into the renal collecting system. Used to relieve obstruction.
Pathologies
Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT):Non-compressibility of the vein on ultrasound is the most sensitive sign.
Arterial Occlusive Disease: Mostly due to atherosclerosis. Emboli often lodge at bifurcations (cardiac origin common). Thrombi form in situ.
Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA): Aortic diameter >3cm.Most common location is infrarenal. Ultrasound is good for screening and size monitoring. Intimal flap indicates dissection, not just aneurysm. Rupture is major risk.
Nuclear Medicine
Radiopharmaceuticals & Principles
Technetium-99m (99mTc): Workhorse isotope. Half-life 6 hours, energy 140 keV. Decays via isomeric transition. Produced from Molybdenum-99 generator.
18F-FDG: Glucose analog used for PET scanning. Uptake reflects metabolic activity. Most common PET tracer.
Radiation Safety: Minimize dose (ALARA principle). Stochastic effects (cancer risk) possible even at low doses. <10 rad unlikely to cause acute effects.
Common Scans
PET Scan (FDG):
Oncology: Staging, restaging, treatment response assessment, detecting recurrence. Important in lymphoma management (negative scan after chemo = good prognosis, follow-up).
Also used for infection/inflammation, cardiology, neurology.
Myocardial Perfusion Imaging (MPI):
Uses tracers like Thallium-201 or Tc-99m agents (Sestamibi, Tetrofosmin).
Compares stress vs rest images to detect ischemia (reversible defect) or infarction (fixed defect).
Higher sensitivity than ECG stress test alone.
Assesses coronary flow reserve.
Note: Tc-99m HMPAO is a brain agent, not used for MPI.
Bone Scan:
Uses Tc-99m labeled bisphosphonates (MDP/HDP).
Highly sensitive for detecting metastatic disease, osteomyelitis, fractures, arthritis.