ACR Appropriateness Criteria®
Clinical Condition: Dyspnea
Variant 1: Any age, positive physical examination.
Radiologic Exam Procedure |
Appropriateness Rating |
Comments |
X-ray, chest |
9 |
|
Appropriateness Criteria Scale
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1 = Least appropriate 9 = Most appropriate
|
Variant 2: Older than age 40, negative physical examination.
Radiologic Exam Procedure |
Appropriateness Rating |
Comments |
X-ray, chest |
8 |
|
Appropriateness Criteria Scale
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1 = Least appropriate 9 = Most appropriate
|
Variant 3: Younger than age 40, negative physical exam. Positive with other symptom, severe dyspnea, or other risk factors.
Radiologic Exam Procedure |
Appropriateness Rating |
Comments |
X-ray, chest |
8 |
|
Appropriateness Criteria Scale
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1 = Least appropriate 9 = Most appropriate
|
Variant 4: Younger than age 40, negative physical examination.
Radiologic Exam Procedure |
Appropriateness Rating |
Comments |
X-ray, chest |
No consensus |
The appropriateness of chest radiography varies and is influenced by several factors, including the severity and duration of dyspnea, the presence of other symptoms, and the presence of other risk factors (cardiovascular, pulmonary, and neoplastic diseases). |
Appropriateness Criteria Scale
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1 = Least appropriate 9 = Most appropriate
|
Variant 5: Any age, nonrevealing or nondiagnostic clinical, standard radiography, and laboratory studies.
Radiologic Exam Procedure |
Appropriateness Rating |
Comments |
CT, chest, high resolution |
7 |
Consider radiation exposure risk from CT in young patients (below the age of 20 years), particularly in women. |
Appropriateness Criteria Scale
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1 = Least appropriate 9 = Most appropriate
|
Note: Abbreviations used in the table are listed at the end of the "Major Recommendations" field.
The literature is sparse on whether a chest radiograph is justified in patients with acute or chronic dyspnea. Most studies pertain to dyspnea in combination with other respiratory symptoms rather than as an isolated event. These studies are included under the Acute Respiratory Illness Appropriateness Criteria topic. This section does not include two of the most serious causes of dyspnea (congestive heart failure [CHF] and pulmonary thromboembolism) because they are dealt with elsewhere (see ACR Appropriateness Criteria® cardiovascular and thoracic sections).
Two studies suggest that the chest radiograph adds enough additional useful information to recommend its routine use in patients with chronic and acute dyspnea. Another study found that acute dyspnea was a strong predictor of radiographic abnormality in patients older than age 40 (only 14% had normal chest radiographs). In dyspneic patients younger than age 40, chest radiographs were normal in 68% and revealed acute and chronic findings in 13% and 18%, respectively. Of the patients with acute findings, the vast majority had either a positive physical examination or hemoptysis. The authors concluded that the chest radiograph was not warranted in patients younger than age 40 unless the physical examination was positive or the patient had hemoptysis.
It is recognized that the decision-making process in the individual patient is affected by factors other than just the presence or absence of dyspnea, including the severity of dyspnea and the presence or absence of other symptoms and other risk factors (cardiovascular, pulmonary, and neoplastic diseases). In clinical practice, chest radiography is usually performed as part of the initial evaluation of dyspnea. One review stated that the most useful methods for evaluating dyspnea are the electrocardiogram (ECG) and chest radiograph. In another study, the chest radiographs were helpful in making a diagnosis in 66% of the hospitalized patients admitted for other reasons and referred to respiratory physicians for breathlessness.
Although computed tomography (CT) is not recommended for the initial evaluation of patients with dyspnea (except for patients with suspected pulmonary embolism), it is frequently appropriate in patients when the results of the clinical, plain film, and laboratory studies are either nonrevealing or nondiagnostic. Many diseases, including bronchiectasis, sarcoidosis, emphysema, pneumoconiosis, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, Langerhans cell histiocytosis, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, bronchiolitis obliterans, and lymphangitic cancer, have features characteristic enough to enable experienced radiologists to make a confident, probable, or limited differential diagnosis in most cases. Biopsy and additional diagnostic testing are often unnecessary. CT and high-resolution CT (HRCT) may reveal an abnormality even when the chest radiograph is normal.
Recommendation
Based on a limited number of studies, chest radiography seems indicated when dyspnea is chronic or severe or when there are associated risk factors (older than age 40, cardiovascular, pulmonary, or neoplastic disease), other signs or symptoms, or positive findings on the physical examination. The rationale for performing chest radiography in acutely dyspneic patients younger than age 40 is less compelling, and there does not appear to be strong support in the literature for either performing or not performing chest radiography when there are no other symptoms or risk factors and when the physical examination is normal.
CT and HRCT should be considered when the initial evaluation of the dyspneic patient is nonrevealing or when it reveals abnormality but no definitive diagnosis.
Abbreviation