Lesson 1Integrating clinical context: risk factors, timing, pleuritic pain, oxygenation, biomarkers (D-dimer, troponin) and how they change diagnostic weightingThis part shows how to blend scan findings with patient details in sudden breathlessness cases, using risk factors, when symptoms started, sharp chest pain, oxygen levels, and tests like D-dimer and troponin to better guess the likely cause.
Clinical risk factors for pulmonary embolismTiming of symptoms and disease evolutionPleuritic pain and chest wall tenderness cluesOxygenation, hemodynamics, and imaging choiceBiomarkers and imaging-based risk weightingLesson 2Pitfalls and mimics: motion artifacts, beam-hardening, dependent atelectasis, and contrast timing errorsThis part looks at common traps and look-alikes in breathlessness scans, like movement blur, beam-hardening issues, base lung collapse from lying down, and wrong contrast timing, with tips to spot and avoid wrong diagnoses.
Recognizing motion and breathing artifactsBeam-hardening and streak artifact mimicsDependent atelectasis versus true consolidationContrast timing errors in CT angiographyChecklist approach to reduce interpretation errorsLesson 3Differential reasoning using signs: PE vs pneumonia vs pulmonary edema vs COPD exacerbationThis part teaches how to compare scan patterns for blood clot in lungs, lung infection, heart-related fluid, and COPD flare-up, using main signs to make a sensible list of possibilities that fits the patient's condition.
Radiographic patterns of acute pulmonary embolismLobar and bronchopneumonia imaging distinctionsCardiogenic pulmonary edema hallmark signsCOPD exacerbation versus acute infection signsAlgorithmic imaging approach to acute dyspneaLesson 4Structured reporting for acute dyspnea: describing location, size, density, margins, distribution, and associated findingsThis part explains how to organise chest scan reports for breathlessness, stressing standard ways to describe where the problem is, its size, density, edges, spread, and related signs for reliable, useful doctor communication.
Standardized description of lesion locationReporting lesion size and volumetric assessmentDensity, attenuation, and enhancement patternsMargins, interfaces, and silhouette descriptionDocumenting distribution and ancillary findingsLesson 5Modalities selection: indications and strengths of chest X-ray vs CT pulmonary angiographyThis part compares chest X-ray and CT lung vessel scan for breathlessness, listing when to use each, their good points, limits, radiation, and contrast risks to pick the right scan for the patient.
Initial role of chest X-ray in dyspnea workupIndications for CT pulmonary angiographyContraindications and risk–benefit balancingRadiation dose and contrast nephrotoxicityAlternative imaging when CTPA is unsuitableLesson 6Semiologic meaning of chest signs: acute vs chronic, alveolar vs interstitial, cardiogenic vs noncardiogenic pulmonary edemaThis part makes clear what major chest scan signs mean, telling new from old changes, air sac from tissue patterns, and heart from non-heart fluid using spread, background, and extra clues.
Acute versus chronic parenchymal changesAlveolar consolidation versus interstitial patternCardiogenic versus noncardiogenic edema signsRole of distribution and symmetry in patternsAncillary signs refining semiologic interpretationLesson 7Systematic chest X-ray interpretation: zones, lines, silhouettes, and cardiothoracic ratioThis part gives a step-by-step way to read chest X-rays for breathless patients, covering zones, lines and tubes, shadow signs, and heart to chest size check.
Quality checks: rotation, inspiration, exposureLung zones and systematic search patternEvaluation of lines, tubes, and devicesSilhouette sign and mediastinal contoursCardiothoracic ratio and heart size limitsLesson 8Pulmonary embolism signs on CT: filling defects, right ventricular strain, pulmonary infarct patterns, mosaic perfusionThis part covers CT signs of lung blood clots in breathlessness, like vessel blocks, right heart stress, lung damage patterns, patchy blood flow, and how they affect risk levels.
Central and segmental filling defect patternsSubsegmental emboli and technical limitationsCT markers of right ventricular strainPulmonary infarct and wedge-shaped opacitiesMosaic perfusion and differential diagnosesLesson 9Key chest imaging signs: pneumothorax, consolidation, air bronchogram, ground-glass opacity, interstitial markings, Kerley B linesThis part reviews main chest scan signs for breathlessness, like air in chest space, solid areas, air in lung tubes, hazy patches, tissue lines, and Kerley B lines, with spotting tips and patient meaning.
Radiographic and CT signs of pneumothoraxConsolidation and air bronchogram correlationGround-glass opacity: causes and patternsInterstitial markings and reticular patternsKerley B lines and pulmonary venous congestionLesson 10Systematic chest CT interpretation: lung windows, mediastinal windows, vascular phases, and protocol selectionThis part outlines a proper way to read chest CT for breathlessness, using lung and chest centre views, vessel stages, scan tailoring, and checking airways, lung tissue, lining, and central structures.
Lung window assessment of parenchymal diseaseMediastinal windows for nodes and massesVascular phases in CT pulmonary angiographyProtocol selection in unstable dyspneic patientsStructured checklist for chest CT review