X-ray findings of AD

In case you didn’t encounter a patient with sharp inter scapular pain today!

A 67-year-old male patient presented with sharp interscapular pain. BP: 189/107 mmHg, HR: 118 bpm, RR: 26/min, T: 37, SpO2: 93% in room air. He has a history of hypertension and diabetes mellitus. The chest x-ray is shown below.

Let’s remember findings of aortic dissection in the chest x-ray.

  1. Depression of the left mainstem bronchus
  2. Displaced intimal calcification
  3. Indistinct or irregular aortic contour
  4. Left apical pleural cap
  5. Opacification of the “AP window” (i.e., clear space between the aorta and the pulmonary artery)
  6. Pleural effusion (left > right)
  7. Tracheal or esophageal deviation
  8. Widened aortic knob or mediastinum (present in only 63% and 56% of patients with type A and type B dissections, respectively)
71.1 - AD1

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