Laminar effusions are a type of pleural effusion where fluid forms a thin band along the chest wall near the costophrenic angle, maintaining the acute angle unlike typical effusions. They are usually caused by elevated left atrial pressure from congestive heart failure or lymphangitic spread of cancer. On chest x-rays, laminar effusions appear as a band of increased density separating the air-filled lung from the inside of the ribs at the lung base.
Laminar effusions are a type of pleural effusion where fluid forms a thin band along the chest wall near the costophrenic angle, maintaining the acute angle unlike typical effusions. They are usually caused by elevated left atrial pressure from congestive heart failure or lymphangitic spread of cancer. On chest x-rays, laminar effusions appear as a band of increased density separating the air-filled lung from the inside of the ribs at the lung base.
Laminar effusions are a type of pleural effusion where fluid forms a thin band along the chest wall near the costophrenic angle, maintaining the acute angle unlike typical effusions. They are usually caused by elevated left atrial pressure from congestive heart failure or lymphangitic spread of cancer. On chest x-rays, laminar effusions appear as a band of increased density separating the air-filled lung from the inside of the ribs at the lung base.
A laminar effusion is a form of pleural effusion in which the
fluid assumes a thin, bandlike density along the lateral chest wall, especially near the costophrenic angle. The lateral costophrenic angle tends to maintain its acute angle with a laminar effusion, unlike the blunting that occurs with a usual pleural effusion. Laminar effusions are almost always the result of elevated left atrial pressure, as in congestive heart failure or secondary to lymphangitic spread of malignancy. They are usually not free-flowing. They can be recognized by the band of increased density that separates the air-filled lung from the inside margin of the ribs at the lung base on the frontal chest radiograph. In healthy persons, an aerated lung should extend to the inside of each contiguous rib (Fig. 8-15).