Normal Chest & Variants - Tiny Thorax Tour
- Thymus: Prominent in infants; variable appearance.
- Sail sign: triangular opacity, often right upper lobe (RUL).
- Wave sign: undulating border from rib indentations.
- Notch sign: inferiorly at cardiophrenic angle.
- Cardiothoracic Ratio (CTR):
- Neonate: < 0.6
- Infant (<1yr): < 0.55
- Child (>1yr): < 0.5
- Ribs: More horizontal. Adequate inspiration: 8-9 posterior ribs visible.
- Lungs: Appear more hyperlucent than adult lungs.
- Trachea: Slight rightward deviation is common.
- Common Variants: Azygos lobe/fissure.
⭐ The thymic sail sign and wave sign are classic normal findings in infants and young children, not to be mistaken for consolidation or mass.
Congenital Anomalies - Born This Way Lungs
- Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia (CDH): Herniation of abdominal contents into thorax; pulmonary hypoplasia.
- Bochdalek (posterolateral, L>R), Morgagni (anteromedial).
- Congenital Pulmonary Airway Malformation (CPAM): Hamartomatous lung lesion; communicates with airway. Types 0-4.
- Pulmonary Sequestration: Non-functioning lung; systemic arterial supply; no normal bronchial communication.
- Intralobar (ILS): No own pleura; drains to pulmonary veins.
- Extralobar (ELS): Own pleura; drains to systemic veins.
- Bronchogenic Cyst: Foregut duplication; mediastinal/intrapulmonary; no airway communication.
- Congenital Lobar Emphysema (CLE): Lobar overinflation; check-valve mechanism.
⭐ Bochdalek hernia: most common CDH (~85%), posterolateral, usually left; scaphoid abdomen.
Infections & Inflammations - Little Lung Invaders
Key differences in common pediatric pneumonias:
| Feature | Viral Pneumonia | Bacterial Pneumonia |
|---|---|---|
| Pattern | Diffuse interstitial, peribronchial cuffing | Lobar/segmental consolidation, air bronchograms |
| Laterality | Often bilateral | Often unilateral |
| Pleural Effusion | Less common | More common |
| Common Pathogens | RSV, Influenza, Adenovirus | S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae |
> ⭐ Round pneumonia is characteristic in children <**8** years due to underdeveloped pores of Kohn and canals of Lambert.
- Miliary TB: Diffuse, fine 1-2 mm nodular opacities (millet seed pattern) throughout both lungs.

Neonatal Distress - First Breath Battles
- Respiratory Distress Syndrome (RDS): Prematurity, surfactant deficiency.
- CXR: Fine reticular/ground-glass opacities, air bronchograms, low lung volumes.
- Transient Tachypnea of Newborn (TTN): Delayed resorption of fetal lung fluid.
- CXR: Perihilar streaking, fluid in fissures, pleural effusions. Resolves 24-72 hrs.
- Meconium Aspiration Syndrome (MAS): Post-term, fetal distress.
- CXR: Coarse, patchy opacities, hyperinflation, risk of pneumothorax.
- Neonatal Pneumonia: Group B Strep common.
- CXR: Diffuse alveolar opacities, consolidation; can mimic RDS.
- Pulmonary Interstitial Emphysema (PIE): Barotrauma (ventilated infants).
- CXR: Linear or cystic lucencies.
⭐ Respiratory Distress Syndrome (RDS) classically presents with fine reticular or ground-glass opacities and prominent air bronchograms on chest X-ray, primarily due to surfactant deficiency in premature infants.

Airway Issues & Tumors - Windpipe Woes & Growths
-
Croup (Laryngotracheobronchitis): Viral; subglottic edema. X-ray: Steeple sign (AP).
-
Epiglottitis: Bacterial; supraglottic. X-ray: Thumb sign (lateral). ⚠️ Emergency.

-
Foreign Body Aspiration (FBA): Peak 1-3 yrs. Expiratory X-ray: air trapping, mediastinal shift.
⭐ The right main bronchus is the most common location for inhaled foreign body aspiration in children.
-
Tracheomalacia: Dynamic tracheal collapse (expiration). Fluoroscopy/CT.
-
Pediatric Mediastinal Masses:
Compartment Common Masses Anterior 📌 "4 T's": Thymus, Teratoma, Thyroid, Terrible Lymphoma Middle Lymphadenopathy (lymphoma, TB), Cysts (Bronchogenic, Duplication) Posterior Neurogenic (Neuroblastoma - common), Cysts (Duplication) 
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Thymic "sail sign" on CXR is normal in infants, not a mass.
- RDS shows diffuse ground-glass opacities, air bronchograms, and low lung volumes.
- TTN presents with perihilar streaking, interlobar fluid, resolving in 24-72 hrs.
- MAS features coarse, patchy infiltrates, hyperinflation, and risk of pneumothorax.
- CDH (Bochdalek) has bowel in chest, scaphoid abdomen, usually left-sided.
- Round pneumonia is common in children <8 years, appearing as a posterior round opacity.
- Foreign body aspiration causes unilateral air trapping (expiratory/decubitus views).
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