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Acute is the opposite of chronic. It means there are no interventions needed at this time although a person might have an underlying disease that was present before they had symptoms which led them to seek treatment. The CXR probably showed no abnormal densities or fluid and the size and shape of the lungs and heart has not changed, there are no new arrhythmias. If an echocardiogram was done it means there is no new changes in cardiac efficiency. The wall motion and valves are stable.
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In theory, the answer is that it could; however, it is understood by (at least all competent practicing Primary Care) Physicians that it does not exclude an acute pulmonary embolism!
Let’s examine a similar radiologic presentation. Suppose a 35 yo male presents with acute SOB and a PA & Lateral CXR is interpreted by me as “normal.”
Does my impression exclude the possibility of there being any acute cardiopulmonary disease?
The answer is NO, of course not!
If I told you, the OP, that at a minimum,…
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This answer is not a substitute for professional medical advice.…
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When a radiologist reads a chest x-ray, he will look at a number of things, such as whether the lungs are fully inflated or whether there is evidence of pneumonia or tumor. The radiologist will always comment on these findings, regardless of whether it has any bearing on the presumed diagnosis. In this case, the radiologist is reporting two normal findings – No evidence of pneumothorax means that the lungs are properly inflated and no evidence of focal consolidation means that there is no unusual fluid or scarring in the lungs that might be pneumonia. These are normal findings that have no
When a radiologist reads a chest x-ray, he will look at a number of things, such as whether the lungs are fully inflated or whether there is evidence of pneumonia or tumor. The radiologist will always comment on these findings, regardless of whether it has any bearing on the presumed diagnosis. In this case, the radiologist is reporting two normal findings – No evidence of pneumothorax means that the lungs are properly inflated and no evidence of focal consolidation means that there is no unusual fluid or scarring in the lungs that might be pneumonia. These are normal findings that have no relation to a pulmonary embolus except to rule out other possible causes for the patient’s symptoms. A chest x-ray does not show a pulmonary embolus.
“Acute Cardiopulmonary Process” is a general term for any one of several diagnoses involving a sudden effect on heart or lung function—a myocardial infarction (heart attack) or pulmonary embolism (blood clot traveling to the lung), for example. The term is usually used as a “placeholder” or catch-all term when a specific diagnosis is pending or unavailable.
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