2nd Edition

Making Sense of the Chest X-ray A hands-on guide

By Paul Jenkins Copyright 2013

    When a patient presents to the emergency department, in the GP practice, or in the outpatient clinic with a range of clinical signs, the chest x-ray is one of the most valuable diagnostic tools available to the attending physician. Accurate interpretation and understanding of the chest x-ray is therefore a crucial skill that all medical students and junior doctors must acquire to formulate quickly an appropriate management plan. Making Sense of the Chest X-ray is here to help.

    The second edition of this well-received pocket guide remains the perfect introduction to the subject. Written from a problem-oriented approach, the author shares his extensive experience of teaching this subject, with "real life" scenarios interspersed throughout the text. Making Sense of the Chest X-ray offers:

    • Advice on when to seek additional/expert opinion
    • Suggestions on how to deal with particularly difficult areas
    • An emphasis on the link between radiographic appearance and clinical finding

    The systematic approach
    The mediastinum and the hila
    Consolidation, collapse and cavitation
    Pulmonary infiltrates, nodular lesions, ring shadows and calcification
    Pleural disease
    The hypoxaemic patient with a normal chest radiograph
    Practice examples and ‘fascinomas’

    Biography

    Paul F. Jenkins is Winthrop Professor of Medicine at University of Western Australia, Perth Royal Hospital and Joondalup Health Campus, Perth, Australia