© OSCE-Aid - WWW - Osce-Aid - Co.uk
© OSCE-Aid - WWW - Osce-Aid - Co.uk
© OSCE-Aid - WWW - Osce-Aid - Co.uk
Chest radiographs are usually taken in the radiology department of a hospital and involve a
patient standing up with their arms 'hugging' a radiographic plate. With this technique the x-
rays penetrate from back to front leading to a 'posterior-anterior' (PA) projection. The
alternative is an 'anterior-posterior' (AP) projection, where the X-rays penetrate from the
front to back of a patient. This occurs when a patient is too unwell to be transferred to the
radiology department, and so a portable x-ray is taken of the patient lying in bed. PA
radiographs are usually more accurate than AP radiographs.
When we look at a radiograph we want to ensure it is ‘technically adequate’. This means that
it needs to satisfy certain criteria before we can safely use it to aid diagnosis.
Rotation – the x-ray needs to be taken of the chest straight-on. If the body is turned
slightly one way or the other it will cause a distorted image. To assess this, look at
the medial heads of the clavicle - they should be equidistant to the spinous process
visible on the vertebra at the same level.
Inspiration – to be able to assess the lung fields adequately, the patient must take a
deep breath just before the x-ray is taken. This requires coordination and can
therefore be difficult for children, some elderly patients and very unwell patients.
Ideally 9 posterior ribs should be visible on the CXR.
Exposure – to be able to assess the CXR adequately, both lung apices and both
costophrenic angles must be visible, otherwise an abnormality might be missed.
You are very unlikely to be given an inadequate CXR to analyse in an OSCE. It is therefore
usually enough to state; ‘this chest radiograph is technically adequate. It is correctly
penetrated, not overly rotated, there is good inspiration and it is fully exposed’.
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