Rad
Abdominal XRay
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Abdominal XRay
, Abdominal Radiograph
See Also
Abdominal Pain Evaluation
Abdominal Anatomy
CT Abdomen
XRay Interpretation
Imaging
Gene
ral
Lateral fat stripes (Flank Fat Stripe)
Fat stripes are vertical dark bands found lateral to the ascending and descending colon
Only 1-2 cm normally separates the fat stripe from colon (ascending on right, descending on left)
Free fluid, when present will increase that distance to >2 cm or more
Bowel
Appearance on
XRay
Bowel
lumen is visible due to bowel gas
Bowel
lumen without air is of fluid density and is not visible
Bowel
wall is of fluid density and is not normally visible
Intraabdominal free air abnormally highlights the bowel wall
Small Bowel
Small Bowel
is located centrally
Valvulae conniventes (circular folds, plicae circulares)
Folds (of fluid density) within the
Small Bowel
Folds cross entire width of
Small Bowel
(contrast with
Large Bowel
haustra)
Large Bowel
(Colon)
Large Bowel
is located peripherally, surrounding the
Small Bowel
Haustra
Folds that do not cross the entire bowel width
Imaging
Approach (Mnemonic: Free ABDO)
Free Fluid
Lateral fat stripe (Flank Fat Stripe) distance from colon >2 cm suggests paracolic gutter free fluid
XRay
cannot distinguish between
Ascites
and blood (similar radiographic densities)
Air
Intraluminal air
Air fluid levels (e.g.
Small Bowel Obstruction
)
Black air overlying a horizontal fluid density line (air-fluid level)
Dilated bowel loops wider than discriminatory values (e.g. ileus,
Small Bowel Obstruction
,
Volvulus
)
Small Bowel
diameter >3 cm
Large Bowel
diameter >6 cm
Cecum diameter >9 cm
Extraluminal air
See Extraluminal Air Below
Intraperitoneal Free Air (pneumoperitoneum)
Retroperitoneal Free Air
Pneumatosis Intestinalis
(gas within the intestinal wall)
Pneumobilia (air in the biliary tree)
Hepatic portal venous gas (
HPVG
, air in
Portal System
)
Abscess
Bowel
Wall Thickening
Findings
Narrowed bowel lumen
Thickened folds (haustra of the
Large Bowel
, valvulae conniventes of the
Small Bowel
)
Large Bowel
indentations (thumb printing)
Bowel
loop appear to separate from one another (due to bowel wall thickening)
Causes
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Bowel
ischemia
Densities (or calcifications)
Bones (e.g.
Lumbar Spine
, hips and
Pelvis
, lower ribs)
Gallstone
s
Appendicolith (may be seen in up to 10% of
Acute Appendicitis
)
Renal stones or
Ureteral Stone
s
Aortic wall calcification
Pancreatic calcifications (associated with
Chronic Pancreatitis
)
Organ outline abnormalities or distorted contour (peri-organ fat typically helps define their normal margins)
Liver
Spleen
Kidney
Bladder
Causes
Extraluminal Air
Intraperitoneal Free Air (pneumoperitoneum)
Suggests bowel perforation (e.g. ruptured
Peptic Ulcer
,
Diverticulitis
, SBO)
Intraperitoneal air may be best seen in right sub-diaphragmatic space on upright
Chest XRay
On the right, free air collects between the diaphragm and the well-defined liver edge
In contrast, in the left subdiaphragm, the normal gastric bubble may obscure free air
Rigler's Sign (double-wall sign)
Bowel
wall (not normally visible) is highlighted between intraluminal gas and extraluminal gas
Best seen on supine abdominal view
False Positive
s
Recent intraabdominal surgery
Extraluminal gas steadily decreases with reabsorption over a 10 day course
Chilaiditi's Sign
Uncommon variant causes a
False Positive
appearance of free air under the diaphragm
In Chilaiditi's syndrome, colon becomes interposed between liver and diaphragm
Retroperitoneal Free Air
Look for air outlining the margins of the
Kidney
Iliopsoas
Muscle
may also be outlined and demonstrate dark air streaks within the
Muscle
body
Pneumatosis Intestinalis
(gas within the intestinal wall)
Bowel
wall is streaked with black
Ominous finding suggesting bowel ischemia, infarction or gangrene
Pneumobilia (air in the biliary tree)
Dark branchining structures within the hilum of the liver
May be seen with
Emphysema
tous
Cholangitis
, as well as recent
ERCP
Hepatic portal venous gas (
HPVG
, air in
Portal System
)
Ominous finding of dark branching structure from the liver hilum toward the bowel
Concerning for abdominal catastrophe (e.g. bowel infarction, infection)
Abscess
Black air overlying a horizontal fluid density line (air-fluid level) in a contained extraluminal space
Unlike intraluminal air, abscesses lack haustra of the
Large Bowel
and valvulae conniventes of the
Small Bowel
Unlike air which transits the bowel with serial xrays, an abscess remains fixed in position on serial exam
References
Ouellette and Tetreault (2015) Clinical Radiology, Medmaster, Miami, p. 26-36
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