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Southwest Pulmonary and Critical Care Fellowships
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Imaging

Last 50 Imaging Postings

(Most recent listed first. Click on title to be directed to the manuscript.)

May 2025 Medical Image of the Month: Aspirated Dental Screw
April 2025 Medical Image of the Month: An Unfortunate Case of Mimicry
March 2025 Medical Image of the Month: An Unusual Case of Pulmonary
   Infarction
February 2025 Medical Image of the Month: Unexpected Complications of
   Transjugular Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunt (TIPS) 
February 2025 Imaging Case of the Month: A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing
January 2025 Medical Image of the Month: Psoriasis with Pulmonary
   Involvement
December 2024 Medical Image of the Month: An Endobronchial Tumor
November 2024 Medical Image of the Month: A Case of Short Telomeres
November 2024 Imaging Case of the Month: A Recurring Issue
October 2024 Medical Image of the Month: Lofgren syndrome with Erythema
   Nodosum
September 2024 Medical Image of the Month: A Curious Case of Nasal
   Congestion
August 2024 Image of the Month: Lymphomatoid Granulomatosis
August 2024 Imaging Case of the Month: An Unexplained Pleural Effusion
July 2024 Medical Image of the Month: Vocal Cord Paralysis on PET-CT 
June 2024 Medical Image of the Month: A 76-year-old Man Presenting with
   Acute Hoarseness
May 2024 Medical Image of the Month: Hereditary Hemorrhagic
   Telangiectasia in a Patient on Veno-Arterial Extra-Corporeal Membrane
   Oxygenation
May 2024 Imaging Case of the Month: Nothing Is Guaranteed
April 2024 Medical Image of the Month: Wind Instruments Player Exhibiting
   Exceptional Pulmonary Function
March 2024 Medical Image of the Month: Sputum Cytology in Patients with
   Suspected Lung Malignancy Presenting with Acute Hypoxic Respiratory
   Failure
February 2024 Medical Image of the Month: Pulmonary Alveolar Proteinosis
   in Myelodysplastic Syndrome
February 2024 Imaging Case of the Month: Connecting Some Unusual Dots
January 2024 Medical Image of the Month: Polyangiitis Overlap Syndrome
   (POS) Mimicking Fungal Pneumonia 
December 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Metastatic Pulmonary
   Calcifications in End-Stage Renal Disease 
November 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Obstructive Uropathy
   Extremis
November 2023 Imaging Case of the Month: A Crazy Association
October 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Swyer-James-MacLeod
   Syndrome
September 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Aspergillus Presenting as a
   Pulmonary Nodule in an Immunocompetent Patient
August 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Cannonball Metastases from
   Metastatic Melanoma
August 2023 Imaging Case of the Month: Chew Your Food Carefully
July 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Primary Tracheal Lymphoma
June 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Solitary Fibrous Tumor of the Pleura
May 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Methamphetamine Inhalation
   Leading to Cavitary Pneumonia and Pleural Complications
April 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Atrial Myxoma in the setting of
   Raynaud’s Phenomenon: Early Echocardiography and Management of
   Thrombotic Disease
April 2023 Imaging Case of the Month: Large Impact from a Small Lesion
March 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Spontaneous Pneumomediastinum
   as a Complication of Marijuana Smoking Due to Müller's Maneuvers
February 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Reversed Halo Sign in the
   Setting of a Neutropenic Patient with Angioinvasive Pulmonary
   Zygomycosis
January 2023 Medical Image of the Month: Abnormal Sleep Study and PFT
   with Supine Challenge Related to Idiopathic Hemidiaphragmatic Paralysis
December 2022 Medical Image of the Month: Bronchoesophageal Fistula in
   the Setting of Pulmonary Actinomycosis
November 2022 Medical Image of the Month: COVID-19 Infection
   Presenting as Spontaneous Subcapsular Hematoma of the Kidney
November 2022 Imaging Case of the Month: Out of Place in the Thorax
October 2022 Medical Image of the Month: Infected Dasatinib Induced
   Chylothorax-The First Reported Case 
September 2022 Medical Image of the Month: Epiglottic Calcification
Medical Image of the Month: An Unexpected Cause of Chronic Cough
August 2022 Imaging Case of the Month: It’s All About Location
July 2022 Medical Image of the Month: Pulmonary Nodule in the
   Setting of Pyoderma Gangrenosum (PG) 
June 2022 Medical Image of the Month: A Hard Image to Swallow
May 2022 Medical Image of the Month: Pectus Excavatum
May 2022 Imaging Case of the Month: Asymmetric Apical Opacity–
   Diagnostic Considerations
April 2022 Medical Image of the Month: COVID Pericarditis
March 2022 Medical Image of the Month: Pulmonary Nodules in the
   Setting of Diffuse Idiopathic Pulmonary NeuroEndocrine Cell Hyperplasia
   (DIPNECH) 
February 2022 Medical Image of the Month: Multifocal Micronodular
   Pneumocyte Hyperplasia in the Setting of Tuberous Sclerosis
February 2022 Imaging Case of the Month: Between A Rock and a
   Hard Place
January 2022 Medical Image of the Month: Bronchial Obstruction
   Due to Pledget in Airway Following Foregut Cyst Resection
December 2021 Medical Image of the Month: Aspirated Dental Implant
Medical Image of the Month: Cavitating Pseudomonas
   aeruginosa Pneumonia
November 2021 Imaging Case of the Month: Let’s Not Dance
   the Twist
Medical Image of the Month: COVID-19-Associated Pulmonary
   Aspergillosis in a Post-Liver Transplant Patient

 

For complete imaging listings click here

Those who care for patients with pulmonary, critical care or sleep disorders rely heavily on chest radiology and pathology to determine diagnoses. The Southwest Journal of Pulmonary, Critical Care & Sleep publishes case-based articles with characteristic chest imaging and related pathology. The editor of this section will oversee and coordinate the publication of a core of the most important chest imaging topics. In doing so, they encourage the submission of unsolicited manuscripts. It cannot be overemphasized that both radiologic and pathologic images must be of excellent quality. As a rule, 600 DPI is sufficient for radiographic and pathologic images. Taking pictures of plain chest radiographs and CT scans with a digital camera is strongly discouraged. The figures should be cited in the text and numbered consecutively. The stain used for pathology specimens and magnification should be mentioned in the figure legend. Those who care for patients with pulmonary, critical care or sleep disorders rely heavily on chest radiology and pathology to determine diagnoses. The Southwest Journal of Pulmonary, Critical Care & Sleep publishes case-based articles with characteristic chest imaging and related pathology. The editor of this section will oversee and coordinate the publication of a core of the most important chest imaging topics. In doing so, they encourage the submission of unsolicited manuscripts. It cannot be overemphasized that both radiologic and pathologic images must be of excellent quality. As a rule, 600 DPI is sufficient for radiographic and pathologic images. Taking pictures of plain chest radiographs and CT scans with a digital camera is strongly discouraged. The figures should be cited in the text and numbered consecutively. The stain used for pathology specimens and magnification should be mentioned in the figure legend.

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Wednesday
Jan112017

Medical Image of the Week: The Luftsichel Sign

Figure 1. Anteroposterior chest radiograph demonstrating partial opacification of the left hemithorax, with preservation of the diaphragmatic border. A central mass is seen (thin arrow), as well as a radiolucent stripe bordering the aorta (thick arrows). Tracheal deviation to the left, a right-sided chest tube and a small right-sided pneumothorax are also noted.

 

Figure 2. Axial computed tomographic of the chest at the level of the carina (A) and left upper lobe bronchus (B) demonstrate opacification and volume loss of the left upper lobe with occlusion of the left upper lobe bronchus. The superior segment of the left lower lobe is interposed between the aorta and the atelectatic upper lobe (arrows). The right-sided pneumothorax is demonstrated and ground glass opacities are noted in the left lower lobe (arrowheads).

 

A 59-year old woman with recently diagnosed small cell carcinoma with metastases to liver and spine presented after a fall presented with lower extremity weakness and incontinence. She was diagnosed with intertrochanteric femoral fracture and prior to planned transfer to our hospital for neurosurgical evaluation she underwent operative fixation of the fracture. An indwelling venous access port was also placed on the same day which was complicated by a pneumothorax requiring chest tube placement

Upon arrival to our institution, she had normal vital signs and was in no distress. On respiratory examination, breath sounds were clear bilaterally on auscultation of the posterior chest but reduced on the left side on anterior auscultation. A chest tube was in place in the right mid-axillary line with no evidence of an air leak.

Chest x-ray demonstrated the right-sided chest tube and partial opacification of the left hemithorax, with a left hilar mass (Figure 1). The radiographic findings of left tracheal deviation, preservation of the left hemidiaphragm, and identification of the luftsichel sign suggested collapse of the left upper lobe. Computed tomography (CT) scan of the chest confirmed left upper lobar collapse due to extrinsic compression of the left upper lobar bronchus by a left upper lobe lung mass (Figure 2).

The luftsichel sign, a long-described marker of left upper lobe collapse on chest radiography, is a para-aortic stripe of radiolucency so-named for its course along the straight proximal descending aorta and curved aortic knob (in the German, luft for air, sichel for sickle) (1). Once theorized to be a result of herniation of the right lung into the left hemithorax after left-sided volume loss, CT correlation studies of radiographic signs in the 1980s verified the superior segment of the left lower lobe as the source of the lucency (2). Collapse of the left upper lobe displaces the major fissure anteriorly; the consequent movement of the left lower lobe results in expansion and interposition of its superior segment between the aorta and the atelectatic lung, as demonstrated in the correlate CT images in our patient.

Luke Gabe MD and Linda Snyder MD

Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, Critical Care and Sleep

Banner-University Medical Center, Tucson, AZ USA

References

  1. Blankenbaker DG. The luftsichel sign. Radiology. 1998 Aug;208:319-20. [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  2. Khoury MB, Godwin JD, Halvorsen RA Jr, Putman CE.CT of obstructive lobar collapse. Invest Radiol. 1985 Oct;20(7):708-16. [CrossRef] [PubMed]

Cite as: Gabe L, Snyder L. Medical image of the week: the luftsichel sign. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2017;14(1):26-7. doi: https://doi.org/10.13175/swjpcc003-17 PDF 

Thursday
Jan052017

January 2017 Imaging Case of the Month

Michael B. Gotway, MD 

 

Department of Radiology

Mayo Clinic Arizona

Scottsdale, AZ USA

 

Clinical History: A 35-year-old woman presented with complaints of increasing shortness of breath and a non-productive cough. She had no significant past medical history.

Laboratory data, including a white blood cell count, coagulation profile, and serum chemistries, were within normal limits. Oxygen saturation on room air was normal.

Frontal and lateral chest radiographs (Figure 1) were performed.

Figure 1. Frontal (A) and lateral (B) chest radiography.

Which of the following statements regarding the chest radiograph is most accurate? (Click on the correct answer to proceed to the second of seven pages)

  1. Frontal and lateral chest radiography shows abnormal mediastinal contours
  2. Frontal and lateral chest radiography shows basal reticulation suggesting possible fibrotic disease
  3. Frontal and lateral chest radiography shows multifocal pleural thickening
  4. Frontal and lateral chest radiography shows numerous small nodules
  5. Frontal and lateral chest radiography shows upper lobe, bilateral perihilar masses

Cite as: Gotway MB. January 2017 imaging case of the month. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2017;14(1):16-23. doi: https://doi.org/10.13175/swjpcc001-17 PDF