Chest X-ray reference topics and example images
Browse educational finding pages, common interpretation terms, and reference chest X-ray examples from a curated NIH-derived subset.
AC joint osteoarthritis
Acromioclavicular osteoarthritis is degenerative wear of the AC joint that can appear on X-ray as joint narrowing, sclerosis, and spurring.
AC joint separation
AC joint separation means the acromioclavicular joint alignment is disrupted, usually after trauma to the shoulder.
Air Bronchogram
An air bronchogram is an imaging sign where dark air-filled bronchi are visible within denser surrounding lung tissue.
Aortic atherosclerosis
Aortic atherosclerosis means chronic plaque and calcific change along the aorta, sometimes visible on chest X-ray as curvilinear calcification.
Apical pleural capping
Apical pleural capping means there is pleural-based opacity or thickening at the lung apex, often from chronic scarring.
Atelectasis
Atelectasis means part of the lung is not fully expanded. It can happen from shallow breathing, mucus blockage, or pressure around the lung and is not the same thing as an infection by itself.
Blunted Costophrenic Angle
Blunting of the costophrenic angle often suggests pleural fluid or another process affecting the lower pleural recess.
Bronchial wall thickening
Bronchial wall thickening means the airways appear more visible or thick-walled than expected, which can suggest airway inflammation or chronic bronchitic change.
Bronchiectasis
Bronchiectasis is chronic widening and distortion of the airways that can predispose to mucus retention and recurrent infection.
Calcific rotator cuff tendinopathy
Calcific rotator cuff tendinopathy means calcium has deposited near a rotator cuff tendon, often causing shoulder pain and limited motion.
Calcified granuloma
A calcified granuloma is a calcified nodule that often reflects prior healed infection or old inflammatory change.
Calcified pleural plaque
Calcified pleural plaques are dense pleural calcifications that often reflect old pleural scarring, especially from prior asbestos-related exposure.
Cardiomegaly
Cardiomegaly means the heart appears enlarged on the chest X-ray. It is a descriptive imaging finding that can be related to heart strain, chronic pressure or volume changes, or even projection effects.
Central line position
Chest X-ray is commonly used to assess the course and tip position of a central venous catheter after placement.
Clavicle fracture
A clavicle fracture may appear on X-ray as a cortical break, step-off, displacement, or angulation involving the collarbone.
Consolidation
Consolidation refers to air-space filling that makes part of the lung appear denser on imaging.
COPD / Emphysema
COPD and emphysema are chronic lung diseases that can change chest X-ray appearance but are not diagnosed by X-ray alone.
Degenerative spine change
Degenerative spine change refers to common age-related wear findings such as disc-space narrowing, osteophytes, and facet or endplate degeneration.
Elevated Hemidiaphragm
An elevated hemidiaphragm means one side of the diaphragm appears higher than expected on chest X-ray.
Emphysema
Emphysema is a chronic lung condition that may appear on chest X-ray through hyperinflation, flattened diaphragms, increased lucency, and reduced vascular markings.
Endotracheal tube position
Chest X-ray is commonly used to confirm that an endotracheal tube sits at an appropriate depth above the carina after intubation.
Enlarged Heart on X-ray
An enlarged heart on X-ray usually refers to an enlarged cardiac silhouette, but projection, positioning, and other factors can affect how large it looks.
Eventration of the diaphragm
Diaphragm eventration means part or all of the diaphragm sits abnormally high because of thinning or weakness, often as a chronic finding.
Fibrosis
Fibrosis refers to scarring within lung tissue and may appear on chest X-ray as coarse linear opacity, reticulation, distortion, or volume loss.
Flail chest
Flail chest is a severe chest wall injury caused by multiple adjacent rib fractures that create an unstable chest segment.
Fracture
Fracture is a break or structural disruption in bone that may be obvious or subtle on X-ray.
Free subdiaphragmatic air
Free subdiaphragmatic air means extraluminal gas is visible beneath the diaphragm, a finding that can indicate perforated abdominal viscera and may require urgent evaluation.
Glenohumeral arthritis
Glenohumeral arthritis is degenerative wear of the main shoulder joint and can appear on X-ray as joint-space narrowing, osteophytes, and chronic remodeling.
Healed rib fracture
A healed rib fracture may appear on X-ray as callus formation, cortical remodeling, or chronic rib deformity from an older injury.
Heart Failure
Heart failure can produce chest X-ray findings such as cardiomegaly, vascular congestion, pulmonary edema, and pleural effusions, especially when fluid overload is present.
Hemothorax
Hemothorax means blood has collected in the pleural space, often after trauma, surgery, or thoracic injury.
Hiatal hernia
A hiatal hernia means part of the stomach has moved through the diaphragm into the chest, sometimes creating a retrocardiac air-fluid level on imaging.
Hilar Enlargement
Hilar enlargement means one or both hila look more prominent than expected on chest X-ray.
Hydropneumothorax
Hydropneumothorax means both air and fluid are present in the pleural space, often producing a visible air-fluid level on imaging.
Hyperinflation
Hyperinflation means the lungs appear more expanded than usual on chest X-ray.
Infiltrate
Infiltrate is a broad chest imaging term often used for abnormal lung density, but it is not a precise diagnosis by itself.
Interstitial Opacities
Interstitial opacities are increased lung markings or diffuse reticular densities seen on chest X-ray.
Kyphosis
Kyphosis means an exaggerated forward curvature of the thoracic spine, which can be seen on radiographs and may reflect posture, degeneration, fracture, or structural spine disease.
Lucency
Lucency means an area looks darker or less dense than expected on an X-ray, but the meaning depends heavily on where it appears and the imaging context.
Lung Mass
A lung mass is a larger focal lung opacity seen on imaging that often needs further evaluation.
Lung Opacity
Lung opacity is a broad imaging term for an area of increased density in the lung.
Mass
A mass is a larger focal opacity or lesion seen on the image. It is a descriptive finding that can have several causes and usually needs more imaging or clinical context to characterize.
Mediastinal Shift
Mediastinal shift means the central chest structures are displaced from their usual position on the X-ray.
Nasogastric tube position
X-ray is commonly used to confirm that a nasogastric or enteric tube follows the esophagus and reaches the stomach.
Nodule
A nodule is a small rounded opacity in the lung or chest field. It is a descriptive imaging finding that can be benign or more concerning depending on size, appearance, and context.
Normal vs Abnormal Chest X-ray
A normal chest X-ray usually shows relatively clear lungs, sharp pleural angles, and no major new dense abnormality, while an abnormal X-ray can show opacity, fluid, collapse, enlargement, or device-related findings.
Old granulomatous disease
Old granulomatous disease refers to chronic calcified nodules, lung scars, or hilar nodes that often reflect prior healed infection.
Osteopenia
Osteopenia means reduced bone density and may make bones appear relatively more lucent or less robust on X-ray.
Pacemaker lead position
Chest X-ray can show the presence and general course of pacemaker leads and help assess whether they follow expected positions.
PICC line position
Chest X-ray helps confirm the course and general tip location of a PICC line after placement.
Pleural Effusion
Pleural effusion means extra fluid has collected around the lung in the pleural space. It can happen with heart problems, infection, inflammation, or other underlying conditions.
Pleural thickening
Pleural thickening means the pleural lining appears abnormally thickened, scarred, or irregular on imaging.
Pneumomediastinum
Pneumomediastinum means free air is present in the mediastinum and may appear as linear lucency outlining the heart, great vessels, or central airways on X-ray.
Pneumonia
Pneumonia is an infection of the lung tissue, often caused by bacteria, viruses, or less commonly fungi. On chest X-ray it can appear as focal or patchy air-space opacity, though imaging alone does not always prove the cause.
Pneumoperitoneum
Pneumoperitoneum means free air in the peritoneal cavity and can be an urgent clue to perforated bowel or another abdominal emergency.
Pneumothorax
Pneumothorax means air is present outside the lung in the pleural space, which can allow part of the lung to collapse. It is an important imaging finding because the size and clinical impact can vary widely.
Port catheter position
Chest X-ray can show the reservoir and catheter course of an implanted venous access port and help assess tip position.
Postoperative free air
Postoperative free air means air is visible after a recent operation or procedure, and whether it is expected depends on timing and symptoms.
Prosthetic aortic valve
A prosthetic aortic valve is a postoperative cardiac device finding seen after aortic valve replacement.
Prosthetic mitral valve
A prosthetic mitral valve is a postoperative cardiac device finding seen after mitral valve replacement.
Pulmonary bullae
Pulmonary bullae are large air-filled spaces within the lung, often related to emphysema or focal lung destruction.
Pulmonary Edema
Pulmonary edema is fluid inside the lungs that often appears on chest X-ray as bilateral or central opacities, sometimes with vascular congestion or pleural effusions.
Pulmonary Nodule
A pulmonary nodule is a small rounded opacity in the lung seen on chest imaging.
Pulmonary vascular cephalization
Pulmonary vascular cephalization means upper-lung vessels look disproportionately prominent, often suggesting elevated left-sided cardiac filling pressure.
Pulmonary vascular congestion
Pulmonary vascular congestion means the lung vessels look more prominent than expected and can suggest elevated cardiac filling pressures or fluid overload.
Rib Fracture
A rib fracture may appear as a visible cortical break or irregularity on X-ray, but nondisplaced fractures can be subtle or not clearly seen.
Scoliosis
Scoliosis means the spine curves abnormally to the side, often with some vertebral rotation, and can be visible on chest or spine X-rays.
Shoulder dislocation
A shoulder dislocation means the humeral head is no longer in its normal alignment with the glenoid, most often after trauma.
Shoulder osteoarthritis
Shoulder osteoarthritis is degenerative joint wear that may appear on X-ray as joint-space narrowing, bone spurs, and irregular articular surfaces.
Sternotomy wires
Sternotomy wires are metallic closure wires seen after median sternotomy, most commonly following cardiac surgery.
Subacromial spur
A subacromial spur is a bony projection under the acromion that can narrow the subacromial space and contribute to shoulder impingement symptoms.
Subcutaneous emphysema
Subcutaneous emphysema means air is present in soft tissues outside the lung and may appear as streaky or bubbly lucency over the chest wall, neck, or shoulders.
Support Devices
Support devices on chest X-ray include lines, tubes, and implanted hardware whose position may affect safety and management.
Thoracic aortic ectasia
Thoracic aortic ectasia means mild diffuse enlargement of the thoracic aorta, larger than expected but not necessarily aneurysmal.
Tortuous aorta
A tortuous aorta means the thoracic aorta appears elongated, unfolded, or more winding than usual on chest X-ray.
Tracheostomy tube position
Chest X-ray can help show the course and general position of a tracheostomy tube within the airway.
Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis is an infectious disease that can affect the lungs and create chest imaging abnormalities, but imaging alone cannot confirm it.
Vertebral compression fracture
A vertebral compression fracture means part of a vertebral body has collapsed or lost height, often due to osteoporosis, trauma, or underlying bone disease.
Vertebral height loss
Vertebral height loss means one or more vertebral bodies appear shortened, which can reflect compression fracture, chronic deformity, or structural bone change.
Widened Mediastinum
Widened mediastinum is a chest X-ray finding in which the central chest silhouette appears broader than expected.
Interpretation terms and chest X-ray basics
These pages explain broad report words and common comparison questions that people often search before they know the exact finding.
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Showing up to 90 reference images for Pneumonia.
PneumoniaPAT-C0E5 · IMG-015
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PneumoniaPAT-A1E2 · IMG-001
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PneumoniaPAT-EBE1 · IMG-019
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PneumoniaPAT-9745 · IMG-008
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PneumoniaPAT-299B · IMG-045
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PneumoniaPAT-ED15 · IMG-025
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PneumoniaPAT-9606 · IMG-005
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PneumoniaPAT-46F4 · IMG-000
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PneumoniaPAT-7FF0 · IMG-004
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PneumoniaPAT-9369 · IMG-011
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PneumoniaPAT-CF38 · IMG-019
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PneumoniaPAT-A85E · IMG-002
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PneumoniaPAT-A380 · IMG-019
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PneumoniaPAT-A380 · IMG-021
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PneumoniaPAT-0BD0 · IMG-001
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PneumoniaPAT-7970 · IMG-002
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PneumoniaPAT-87F9 · IMG-008
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PneumoniaPAT-EEB6 · IMG-007
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PneumoniaPAT-EEB6 · IMG-024
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PneumoniaPAT-9CBB · IMG-002
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PneumoniaPAT-29E8 · IMG-000
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PneumoniaPAT-D3CD · IMG-009
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PneumoniaPAT-8599 · IMG-004
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PneumoniaPAT-C6F2 · IMG-002
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PneumoniaPAT-896D · IMG-007
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PneumoniaPAT-AFC8 · IMG-006
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PneumoniaPAT-BFA5 · IMG-007
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PneumoniaPAT-076C · IMG-026
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PneumoniaPAT-35FF · IMG-000
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PneumoniaPAT-49B0 · IMG-000
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PneumoniaPAT-F762 · IMG-007
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PneumoniaPAT-FC53 · IMG-017
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PneumoniaPAT-504A · IMG-008
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PneumoniaPAT-504A · IMG-010
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PneumoniaPAT-55FC · IMG-011
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PneumoniaPAT-6B69 · IMG-043
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PneumoniaPAT-DB16 · IMG-004
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PneumoniaPAT-C92F · IMG-002
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PneumoniaPAT-7311 · IMG-007
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PneumoniaPAT-6020 · IMG-002
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PneumoniaPAT-5385 · IMG-027
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PneumoniaPAT-5385 · IMG-070
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PneumoniaPAT-884A · IMG-000
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PneumoniaPAT-9DBB · IMG-001
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PneumoniaPAT-22CC · IMG-009
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PneumoniaPAT-2BB9 · IMG-011
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PneumoniaPAT-B7D2 · IMG-017
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PneumoniaPAT-1FC7 · IMG-025
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PneumoniaPAT-9232 · IMG-005
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PneumoniaPAT-E88F · IMG-032
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PneumoniaPAT-FDCB · IMG-006
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PneumoniaPAT-2E52 · IMG-007
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PneumoniaPAT-58A6 · IMG-001
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PneumoniaPAT-154C · IMG-004
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PneumoniaPAT-5892 · IMG-002
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PneumoniaPAT-66DD · IMG-000
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PneumoniaPAT-1875 · IMG-024
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PneumoniaPAT-32D9 · IMG-003
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PneumoniaPAT-4228 · IMG-018
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PneumoniaPAT-C484 · IMG-001
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PneumoniaPAT-D563 · IMG-013
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PneumoniaPAT-D8E5 · IMG-016
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PneumoniaPAT-C2EA · IMG-008
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