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Case #1
Demographics: 24 years old, Female
Indication: Trauma

Case #1

Findings

Chest Radiograph

  • Acute nondisplaced right first rib fracture
  • No pleural effusion or pneumothorax
  • Mild hazy bibasilar opacities

CT

Chest

Abdomen/Pelvis

  • No acute findings
  • Narrowing and inferior deviation at the origin of the celiac artery with poststenotic dilation

MSK

Diagnosis

Pulmonary contusion

Sample Report

Acute nondisplaced fractures of the right first and left fifth through eighth ribs.

Trace bilateral pneumothoraces.

Trace anterior pneumomediastinum without mediastinal hematoma or evidence of aortic trauma.

Pulmonary contusion in the anterior aspects of the right upper and middle lobes and to a lesser extent in the lingula.

Acute L1 and possibly T11 compression fractures with minimal height loss and no bony retropulsion.

Age-indeterminate mild offset of the coccygeal segments which may be traumatic or developmental.

No acute traumatic findings in the abdominopelvic cavity.

Narrowing at the origin of the celiac artery likely relates to median arcuate ligament compression. Though often asymptomatic, this finding can be a cause for chronic abdominal pain.

Discussion

  • Pulmonary contusion is often located in a non-dependent area of the lung and correlates with the site(s) of blunt chest trauma
  • Pulmonary contusion will typically resolve within a few days with supportive management, so if you see groundglass opacities persisting a week or more after trauma or appearing more than 24 hours after trauma, there is likely something else going on
  • If you see bilateral dependent groundglass opacities, this is more likely to represent subsegmental atelectasis or aspiration
  • Make sure to look for associated pulmonary laceration or pneumatocele
  • In this case, the trace pneumomediastinum is likely a product of the Macklin effect: gas released from alveolar rupture tracks along bronchovascular bundles back to the mediastinum
  • However, whenever you see pneumomediastinum, make sure to look closely for evidence of tracheobronchial or esophageal injury and look for other signs of mediastinal trauma including mediastinal hematomas and aortic injuries

Annotated Images & Illustrations

Pulmonary contusion: groundglass opacities in the anterior aspects of the right upper and middle lobes (red arrows).

Pulmonary contusion: groundglass opacities in the anterior aspects of the right upper and middle lobes (red arrows).

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