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page1 Chest Sonography in Children: Current Indications, Techniques, and Imaging Findings After plain radiography, CT and MR imaging are • the usually preferred modalities for imaging the pediatric chest. With acoustic limitations imposed by bone and air, the thorax at first seems unforgiving place to perform ultrasound (US Various diseases and pathologic conditions, however, can allow an acoustic window into the chest, and the unique anatomy of the pediatric chest provides other imaging windows for creative sonologists. Advances in thoracic US relying on interpretation of artifacts produced by the interface of air in the lung and pleural space allow important information about the lung itself to be determined by US. US will never replace CT and MR imaging, but it can provide important and at times superior information safely and efficiently, particularly in pediatric patients. . TECHNIQUE Although US of the chest may be the first • imaging modality used in some acute and critical care settings, in general, pediatric patients undergoing sonographic examination of the chest have a preceding plain radiographic examination. This helps focus the US study and the combination of information obtained can improve diagnostic accuracy. As with sonography elsewhere in the body, the appropriate transducers and frequencies vary with the size of the patient and the structure examined. Neonates and small infants are easily examined with highfrequency linear transducers, whereas older children and adolescents require lower-frequency transducers. Smaller footprint sector, vector, or tightly curved array transducers are needed to insonate between ribs, below the diaphragm, or from the suprasternal notch. Linear transducers are valuable for examining chest wall lesions and for examining the lung pleura interface. • • • • • Basic B-mode real-time US is generally all that is required for chest US. The use of M-mode imaging has proved helpful, however, in the evaluation of pneumothorax and quantification of diaphragmatic motion. Color Doppler can be useful when evaluating peripheral parenchymal opacities to differentiate vascularized lesions from infarcts. Useful acoustic windows are shown in Fig. 1 • • • • Fig. 1. Acoustic windows for thoracic sonography: 1, supraclavicular; 2, suprasternal; 3, parasternal; 4, transsternal; 5, intercostal; 6, subxyphoid; 7, subdiaphragmatic; and 8, posterior paraspinal. (Adapted from Kim OH, Kim WS, Min JK, et al. US in the diagnosis of pediatric chest disease. Radiographics 2000;20: 653–71; with permission.) • • • • • • • The relatively unossified thorax of the neonate and infant, along with the presence of a relatively large thymus allow imaging of the anterior chest and mediastinum through sternal and costochondral cartilages. Suprasternal or supraclavicular approaches may also be useful in examining the anterior mediastinum and thoracic vessels. Intercostal scanning allows imaging of the lung and pleura throughout the thorax and of the posterior mediastinum. • • • • The inferior thoracic cavity can be examined using • the liver, spleen, or fluidfilled stomach as acoustic windows. For evaluation of the lung and pleural space in • critically ill patients, a systematic organized approach is required. One suggested approach divides each • hemithorax into 4 quadrants: upper anterior, lower anterior, upper lateral, and basal lateral2; the anterior axillary line divides the anterior from lateral regions (Fig. 2) Fig. 2. Locations of lung survey imaging. The chest is divided into anterior and lateral portions by the anterior axillary line: 1, anterior superior; 2, anterior basal; 3, lateral superior; and 4, lateral basal. (Adapted from Volpicelli G, Silva F, Radeos M. Real-time lung ultrasound for the diagnosis of alveolar consolidation and interstitial syndrome in the emergency department. Eur J Emerg Med 2011;17:63–72; with permission.) • • • • • • • • If a patient’s condition permits, • upright posterior imaging should be • performed to better evaluate the posterior chest and to improve detection of small pleural effusions. INDICATIONS The most common indication for chest • sonography is to evaluate an opacity detected on a chest radiograph. In the case of a completely opacified hemithorax, US can differentiate whether parenchymal or • pleural disease (or both) is the cause (Fig. 3). Fig. 3. (A) Newborn with respiratory distress and opaque left hemithorax of unclear etiology. (B) Longitudinal parasternal sonogram shows a large anechoic effusion (E) and consolidated left lung (L). The diaphragm is partially everted, displacing the spleen (S). Aspiration revealed a chylothorax. (Adapted from Coley BD. Pediatric chest ultrasound. Radiol Clin North Am 2005;43:405–18; with permission.) • • • • Such information is often helpful for guiding the appropriate direction of therapy and possible thoracic intervention. Focal masses can be imaged to determine location and whether they are solid or cystic . Abnormal mediastinal contours in infants are usually due to an unusually sized or shaped thymus, which can be easily shown by US,obviating CT. Palpable chest wall lesions are best initially imaged with US, because nonpainful pediatric chest wall masses are typically benign and require no further investigation. Although CT and MR angiographic techniques can produce exquisite vascular images, US is often the first and only necessary study for examination of suspected thromboses and other abnormalities of thoracic vasculature. • • • • • NORMAL ANATOMY Unossified costochondral and sternal cartilage • appears hypoechoic on US (Fig. 4). • Fig. 4. Normal costosternal junction. Sonogram along the long axis of an anterior rib in a teenager shows the bony portion of the rib (R) with posterior acoustic shadowing and the hypoechoic cartilaginous rib end (C). • • • • • The shape of costochondral cartilage is often varied and may produce irregular chest wall “masses.” With aging, these cartilages gradually ossify, diminishing acoustic access to the thorax. The thymus is larger compared with the rest of the thorax during the first year of life. The thymus is physically largest, however, during adolescence. Usually confined to the anterior mediastinum, the thymus may extend into the neck or middle and posterior mediastinum, which may produce concern for pathology. Fortunately, the thymus has a characteristic echotexture, with regular linear and punctate echogenicities that allows its confident recognition and differentiation from mediastinal pathology (Fig. 5). • • • • • • Fig. 5. Normal thymus. Right parasternal longitudinal view shows a normal triangular-shaped right thymic lobe (arrowheads) with characteristic linear and punctate echogenicities conforming to the contours of the brachiocephalic vein (V) and main pulmonary artery (PA). Note the hypoechoic costosternal cartilages (C). • • • • • • The normal pleural space contains a tiny amount of fluid,27,39 but fluid is seen with US in only 35% of normal healthy children.39 The acoustic interface of the chest wall with normal aerated lung provides a strong reflective surface and produces a characteristic reverberation within the US image, often referred to as A lines (Fig. 6). • • • • • • • Fig. 6. Normal chest wall/lung interface; A lines. Transverse intercostal sonogram using a linear transducer shows the strong echogenic interface of the aerated lung and pleura (arrows) as well as the reverberation artifacts projected within the deeper lung parenchyma (A lines) (arrowheads). • • • • • • The thinner chest wall of infants and small • children, however, may not demonstrate this artifact . Aerated lung is also seen to move along the • parietal pleural surface with respiration, termed the gliding sign. Using M mode, the normal motion of the lung produces a characteristic pattern, termed the seashore sign (Fig. 7).16 Fig. 7. Normal chest wall/lung interface; seashore sign. Transverse intercostal gray-scale and M-mode image shows a normal lung interface (arrows) and a normal A line (arrowhead). In the M-mode image, the normal motion of the lung ([ ]) gives a pattern some liken to sand on a beach, thus the term seashore sign. The recent literature is replete with many • other terms, which often are more confusing than clarifying. Recognizing these normal findings, however, is important, because deviations from their appearances provide clues to pleural and parenchymal disease. THE PLEURAL SPACE Effusions Being superficial to normally echogenic aerated lungs, the pleural space is well visualized by US. Although pleural fluid collections are often suspected from chest radiographs, US is more sensitive in detecting pleural fluid than chest radiographs, particularly in critically ill patients in whom upright or decubitus radiographs are not possible. The sonographic appearance of pleural fluid depends on its composition and may range from completely anechoic, in the case of simple transudative collections, to collections with mobile echogenic debris in cases of infection and hemorrhage, to septated and more solid appearing collections with empyemas and organizing infection (Fig. 8). • • • • Fig. 8. Sonographic appearances of pleural collections. (A) Subdiaphragmatic longitudinal sonogram shows a mostly anechoic left pleural effusion (E) along with consolidated lung (L). The spleen (S) and kidney (K) help to provide acoustic windows into the inferior chest. (B) Empyema with the formation of fibrinous septations. (C) Well-organized, solid-appearing empyema (E) adjacent to aerated lung (L). (Adapted from Coley BD. Pediatric chest ultrasound. Radiol Clin North Am 2005;43:405– 18; with permission.) • • • • • Simple nonloculated collections can be seen • to change shape with patient breathing or change in position. The distinction of echogenic but still fluid collections from more solid collections can be aided by the fluid color sign, in which mobile debris produces signal with color Doppler whereas nonmobile solid material does not. As infected pleural collections progress and organize, fibrinous strands begin to form. Initially thin and mobile, these fibrin strands thicken and increase, creating multiple loculations in which fluid no longer changes with patient position or respiration. The parietal and visceral pleura may be thickened as well, as often seen with CT. Infected pleural collections may progress to solidify into a homogenous echogenic gelatinous mass encasing the underlying lung, eventually producing a fibrothorax. • • • • US is superior to CT in characterizing the • nature of pleural fluid collections and can help guide percutaneous drainage Simple fluid collections are amenable to percutaneous aspiration and are most safely performed with US guidance (Fig. 9). • Fig. 9. Pleural effusion aspiration. Transverse intercostal sonogram of the left chest shows a pleural effusion (E) with some echogenic material. The aspirating needle (arrow) is seen just entering the pleural space. S, spleen. • • • • • Because up to 50% of pediatric parapneumonic • effusions recur after aspiration, however, it is often more prudent to leave a drainage catheter in place, even if only for a short time. The US detection of fibrinous strands and even • honeycombing of the pleural space is not a contraindication to percutaneous drainage, but it does mean that fibrinolytic therapy is required to clear the collections and should be started promptly to achieve proper drainage (Fig. 10). • Fig. 10. Septated parapneumonic effusion. Longitudinal sonogram of the left chest shows consolidated lung (L) and complex partially septated fluid (asterisks). This collection responded well to interventional drainage and lytic therapy. K, kidney; S, spleen. • • • • • In the setting of continued fevers and poor • clinical response after pleural drainage, plain radiographs may not adequately assess whether undrained pleural collections or underlying parenchymal infection is the cause, US can adequately assess the pleural space and portions of the underlying lung, although there may be limitation from existing chest tubes, dressings, and patient discomfort. In these complicated and refractory cases, CT • may be a better option, especially if surgical Masses Malignant disease involving the pleural space • is much less common in children than in adults54 but ca occur with Wilms tumor, neuroblastoma, leukemia, and sarcoma Primary chest wall neoplasms and pleural • metastases are often accompanied by hemorrhagic pleural effusions, which appear as echogenic debris-filled fluid at sonography. The presence of pleural fluid aids in detection • of solid masses adherent to the parietal or visceral pleura (Fig. 11). Fig. 11. Longitudinal sonogram of the right chest in a child with Wilms tumor shows a pleural effusion (E) outlining a metastatic deposit on the diaphragmatic parietal pleura (arrow). (Adapted from Coley BD. Pediatric chest ultrasound. Radiol Clin North Am • • • • • If visible sonographically, pleural masses are • readily biopsied with US guidance (Fig. 12), allowing confirmatory histologic diagnoses Fig. 12. Pleural biopsy. Intercostal sonogram in a child with Wilms tumor shows a pleural-based solid mass (arrowheads). The aspirating needle (arrow) is seen within the lesion, and yielded metastatic Wilms tumor • • • • • Pneumothorax As discussed previously, the normal stron acoustic interface between pleura and aerated lung produces repeating posterior echogenicities (A lines), and the normal sliding motion of the lung can be seen during respiration (see Fig. 6) . When air is introduced into the pleural space, the normal tension between the pleural layers is lost, and a gap is created between the parietal and visceral pleura disrupting the normal acoustic interface . The sliding of the underlying lung can no longer be seen, and the normal reverberation is • • • • Fig. 13. Pneumothroax. Transverse intercostal sonogram shows a normal pattern of moving lung (seashore sign) deep to the lung pleural interface (arrow). On the right hand side of the image, there is loss of this normal pattern with a static series of horizontal echogenicities. Note how this looks • • • • • • Some reports indicate that US is superior to • plain radiographs in pneumothorax detection and may be useful in monitoring procedural complications and assessing critically ill and trauma patients. Similarly, the curtain sign has been described • in hydropneumothorax where the normal pleural gliding is lost and mobile air fluid levels are visualized. LUNG PARENCHYMA Interstitial Disease Plain radiography usually suffices for the evaluation of • parenchymal lung disease in pediatric patients, but unclear cases may benefit from US or CT examination. The traditional view is that aerated lung must becom • atelectatic or consolidated before it becomes possible to examine with US. More recent studies have shown that there is • significant important clinical information that can be obtained by evaluating the artifacts produced from the surface of aerated lung. The interaction of the sound beam with interlobular • septa produces so-called B lines, also referred to as A few scattered B lines can be normally seen and may be caused by focal subpleural thickening or distortion by parenchymal disease. Multiple B lines can indicate an abnormality with the underlying lung. Anything that thickens the interlobular septa can produce a B line, but the distinction between fibrotic change and interstitial edema can often be made given the clinical context. In adults, this finding has been shown with a variety of disorders, such as pulmonary fibrosis, viral pneumonias, sarcoidosis, lymphangitic • • • • • Investigators have subdivided B lines into B7 • lines (7 mm apart), indicating thickened interlobular septa, and B3 lines (3 mmapart), indicating the equivalent of the ground glass appearance at CT. The presence of B lines is shown to correlate • accurately with other imaging, pulmonary artery pressures, and fluid status and seem accurate in diagnosing interstitial and alveolar disease. Experience in children is more limited, • particularly regarding interstitial edema,68 but my anecdotal experience indicates that similar findings occur in children as well (Fig. 14). Fig. 14. Interstitial edema. (A) Chest radiograph of a teenage girl with dyspnea and new-onset renal failure shows interstitial edema. (B) Longitudinal image of the right upper quadrant shows an abnormally echogenic kidney consistent with the subsequent diagnosis of glomerulonephritis. Note the regularly spaced B lines within the right lower lobe (arrowheads). These correspond to the thickened interlobular septa • • • • Surfactant deficiency disease produces • variable appearances ranging from multiple B lines to a diffusely echogenic lung, which eliminates visualization of the normal chest wall–pleural interface (Fig. 15). • Fig. 15. Surfactant deficiency disease. (A) Chest radiograph of a preterm infant shows diffuse granular airspace disease typical of surfactant deficiency, worst in the right lower lobe. (B) Transverse sonogram of the right lower chest through the liver (L) shows abnormal increased pulmonary echogenicity of the right lower lobe without visualization of focal B lines. • • • • The sonographic appearance correlates well • with the clinical and radiographic findings.71 Chronic lung disease in the infant produces similar acoustic interfaces as seen in adult parenchymal disease, creating multiple ringdown artifacts (Fig. 16). Fig. 16. Chronic lung disease. (A) Portable chest radiograph in a former preterm infant with continued oxygen requirements shows increased interstitial markings of chronic lung disease. (B) Longitudinal sonogram through the left upper quadrant shows multiple B lines indicating interstitial lung disease. (Adapted from Coley BD. Pediatric chest ultrasound. Radiol Clin North Am 2005;43:405–18; with permission.) • • • • The progression of US findings from surfactant • deficiency to bronchopulmonary dysplasia may be useful as a predictor of the development of chronic lung disease and may appear earlier than chest radiographic findings. The administration of exogenous surfactant, • however, does not seem to improve the sonographic appearance in surfactant deficiency. Interstitial prominence causing B lines persists, • indicating that interstitial extravascular fluid clearance remains impaired despite radiographic Consolidation Airless lung can appear sonographically similar • to liver, thus has been termed, hepatization (Fig. 17). Fig. 17. Lung consolidation. Longitudinal sonogram over the lower right chest shows consolidated lung superior to the liver. Although their echogenicities differ, their internal sonographic appearance is similar. (Adapted from Coley BD. Pediatric chest ultrasound. • • • • • The underlying internal architecture of the • lung is preserved, however, allowing differentiation from masses or other processes. Branching linear echogenicities representing air bronchograms are often seen (Fig. 18)