{Reference Type}: Case Reports {Title}: Central Pulmonary Embolism Detected on a Chest X-Ray: A Case Report. {Author}: Saliba T;Tack D; {Journal}: J Belg Soc Radiol {Volume}: 107 {Issue}: 1 {Year}: 2023 {Factor}: 1.912 {DOI}: 10.5334/jbsr.3052 {Abstract}: Patients presenting to the emergency room with respiratory symptoms often receive a chest X-ray as part of the initial workup to exclude common pathologies. A 60-year-old patient presented to the emergency department with dyspnoea. An initial chest X-ray revealed the Fleischner's sign, the knuckle sign, and the Westermark sign, specific but not sensitive for central pulmonary embolism, prompting a follow-up angio CT to confirm the diagnosis. The patient was treated and discharged a few days later.
UNASSIGNED: Chest X-rays, done as part of an initial workup, can show signs of pathologies that are not yet clinically suspected, such as pulmonary embolism.