WebMD: Better Information. Better Health.
  • Bookmark This Page
  • Site Map
  • Sign up for WebMD Newsletters

Heart Disease Health Center

Select a topic to explore more.
Select An Article
Font Size
A
A
A

Heart Disease: Diagnosing Heart Disease: Chest X-Ray

A chest X-ray (also called chest film) uses a very small amount of radiation to produce an image of the heart, lungs, and chest bones on film.

Your doctor uses a chest X-ray to:

  • Look at the structures of the chest (bones, heart, lungs).
  • Evaluate placement of devices (pacemakers, defibrillators) or tubes placed during hospitalization for treatment and monitoring (catheters, chest tubes).
  • Diagnose lung and cardiac diseases.

How Should I Prepare for the Test?

No special preparation is necessary, but you should tell the technician if you could be pregnant.

What Happens During the Test?

The chest X-ray can be performed at bedside or in a radiology department. You will be asked to remove all clothes and metallic jewelry from the waist up and put on a hospital gown for the test.

If you are able, you will be asked to stand very still with your chest against the cassette that contains the film. The X-ray machine will then send a beam of ionizing radiation through an X-ray tube. This energy passes through your chest and is then absorbed on film to create a picture. Bones and other dense areas show up as lighter shades of gray while areas that don't absorb the radiation appear as dark gray.

You will be asked to hold your breath for a few seconds to generate better images.

Then you will be asked to do the same thing, but with your left side against the cassette and your arms elevated.

The entire test takes no more than 10 to 15 minutes.

 

Reviewed by the doctors at The Cleveland Clinic Heart Center.

WebMD Medical Reference provided in collaboration with the Cleveland Clinic

Edited by Tracy C. Shuman, MD on October 01, 2005
Next Article:
webMD Video

click to expand/contract  Wide Awake Heart Surgery

Doctors are studying a new way to do heart bypass surgery designed to make recovery time shorter, safer, and more comfortable.

Watch Video

click to expand/contract  Predicting Heart Disease

click to expand/contract  Assess Heart Attack Risk

click to expand/contract  Angioplasty vs. Clot-Buster Drugs

click to expand/contract  Truth About Trans Fats

Most Popular Stories

WebMD Special Sections