SAEVA Proceedings 2018 4. Proceedings | Page 56

SAEVA Congress 2018 Proceedings | 12-15 February 2018 | ATKV Goudini Spa inspiration and expiration, evaluating movement of the visceral pleural lung surface relative to the parietal pleural surface of the thoracic wall and diaphragm. If movement of the lung across the parietal pleural surfaces is rough or erratic, a dry pleuritis is probably present. Absence of any movement between these surfaces during respiration is also an indication of a dry pleuritis or adhesions between parietal and visceral pleural surfaces, but is occasionally seen in normal horses taking very shallow breaths. Pulmonary Abnormalities Compression atelectasis Compression atelectasis occurs whenever the lung parenchyma is collapsed by fluid, air, or viscera (in horses with diaphragmatic hernia) occupying space normally containing lung. The compressed lung is collapsed and smaller airways are no longer aerated, leaving this portion of lung hypoechoic (echogenicity of soft tissue). The atelectic lung is retracted towards the hilus. Linear air echoes may be imaged in larger airways and appear crowded together as they converge towards the root of the lung. Normal lung is also lighter than fluid and floats on top of and within pleural fluid. Consolidation The earliest sign of consolidation may be dimpling or an irregularity of the visceral pleural surface of the lung, a nonspecific change caused by nonuniform aeration of the lung periphery. B lines or lung rockets, previously known at comet tail artifacts, radiate from these nonaerated areas. In horses with pneumonia, sonolucent areas representing pulmonary parenchymal consolidation appear, surrounded by normally aerated lung. These areas of pulmonary parenchymal consolidation usually have an irregular margin with hyperechoic artifacts deep to the lesion which mimic acoustic enhancement. Small consolidated areas may be imaged only during exhalation because the lesion moves underneath the adjacent rib, or inhaled air entering the surrounding airways and alveoli intervenes, reflecting the ultrasound beam and preventing their visualization. The ultrasonographic diagnosis of pulmonary parenchymal consolidation is based upon the detection of sonolucent pulmonary parenchyma and visualization of one or more of the lung's anatomical features: sonographic air bronchograms, sonographic fluid bronchograms, pulmonary vessels, or scattered echogenic foci due to residual air in consolidated lung parenchyma. Sonographic air bronchograms are imaged as distinctive hyperechoic linear air echoes in sonolucent lung. These hyperechoic linear echoes correspond to the traditional air bronchograms detected on thoracic radiographs. These strongly echogenic branching lines of the air-filled bronchi converge towards the root of the lung, becoming larger as they merge. 51