Palla's sign

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Palla's sign
AP Chest X-Ray.tif
Palla Sign and Westermark Sign
Differential diagnosis pulmonary embolism

Palla's sign is a clinical sign in which an enlarged right descending pulmonary artery is seen on the chest x-ray in patients with pulmonary embolism. It is of low sensitivity, and its specificity is not known. It exhibits as a "sausage" appearance on X-ray. [1] It is named after italian radiologist Antonio Palla. In 1983, he published his observations that close to 25% of patients with pulmonary embolism had a chest x-ray sign of enlarged right descending pulmonary artery. [2] [3]

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Chang sign is a radiologic sign for detecting pulmonary embolism in X-ray films. It refers to the dilatation and abrupt change in calibre of a previously normal descending pulmonary artery on a chest X-ray film. Chang sign usually appears within 24 hours of the onset of chest pain due to pulmonary embolism, and the maximal dilatation of the descending pulmonary artery often occurs in two to three days after the onset of pain.

References

  1. Lee DS, Vo H, Franco A, Keshavamurthy J, Rotem E. "Palla and Westermark Signs". J Thorac Imaging. 2017;32(4):7. at Journal of Thoracic Imaging
  2. Ricardo Ladeiras-Lopes; Ayres Neto; Cláudia Costa; Marta Sousa; Paula Ferreira; Vítor Paixão Dias; Vasco Gama Ribeiro (7 May 2013). "Hampton's Hump and Palla's Sign in Pulmonary Embolism". Circulation. 127 (18): 1914–1915. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.112.000650 . PMID   23648682.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  3. Dr Daniel J Bell; Dr Isaac Narouz. "Palla sign" . Retrieved 10 May 2021.