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How Chest X-Ray Can Detect Severe Mitral Regurgitation Before Echocardiography

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  Left Atrial Enlargement on Chest X-Ray: Why Every Radiologist Should Recognize This Early Sign of Severe Mitral Regurgitation Introduction Every day, thousands of chest radiographs are interpreted worldwide. Most are ordered for respiratory symptoms, routine health examinations, or emergency evaluations. Yet among these seemingly ordinary studies lie subtle cardiac findings that may dramatically influence a patient's prognosis. One of the most underrecognized—but clinically significant—examples is left atrial enlargement (LAE) . Although echocardiography remains the gold standard for evaluating valvular heart disease, experienced radiologists often identify the earliest clues long before an ultrasound is performed. Careful inspection of the cardiac silhouette, mediastinal contours, and bronchial anatomy on a standard chest radiograph can reveal chronic pressure or volume overload of the left atrium. The presented case involves a 67-year-old man with progressive exertional dyspnea...

Gastric Enlargement Due to Gastric Outlet Obstruction: The Hidden Emergency Every Radiologist Should Recognize Early

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A Clinical Story: When Persistent Abdominal Pain Revealed a Massive Gastric Enlargement A 53-year-old woman with a medical history of hypertension and chronic constipation presented to the emergency department after experiencing two weeks of persistent abdominal pain. The pain gradually intensified after meals and radiated toward her back. She also complained of nausea but denied vomiting, fever, diarrhea, or weight loss. Physical examination demonstrated marked abdominal distension with diffuse tenderness. Percussion revealed tympany over the upper abdomen and dullness inferiorly. Bowel sounds were absent on the left side, and a large palpable abdominal mass raised concern for a potentially life-threatening intra-abdominal process. Initial laboratory studies were surprisingly unremarkable. In many emergency departments, this clinical presentation might initially prompt consideration of bowel obstruction, pancreatic disease, or intra-abdominal malignancy. However, contrast-enhanced CT ...