SAEVA Proceedings 2018 4. Proceedings | Page 50

SAEVA Congress 2018 Proceedings | 12-15 February 2018 | ATKV Goudini Spa Normally aerated lung Watching the lung as the horse breathes; the visceral pleural edge of the lung is imaged gliding ventrally across the diaphragm with inhalation and dorsally with exhalation, "the gliding sign". In most normal horses there is no pleural fluid visualized. However, small accumulations (up to 3.5 cm) of anechoic pleural fluid in the most ventral portions of the thorax have been detected in clinically normal horses. The diaphragm is curvilinear and appears thick and muscular in the more ventral locations and thin and tendinous dorsally and caudally. The lung covers the cranial and caudal mediastinum in most horses, although a hypoechoic soft tissue mass (thymus) may be visualized in young horses in the cranial mediastinum ventral and medial to the right apical lung lobe and cranial to the heart. Fatty tissue may also be imaged in this area and around the heart, most commonly detected in ponies and fat horses. Fat is usually slightly more heterogeneous and echogenic than thymus and continues caudally around the heart into the caudal mediastinum. Pleural Abnormalities Pleural effusion The most common pleural abnormality (pleural effusion) appears as an anechoic to hypoechoic space between the lung, thoracic wall, diaphragm, and heart. Pleural effusion with compression atelectasis 45