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A chest ultrasound is an imaging test. It uses sound waves to look at the structures and organs in your chest. It can help your doctor see how well your lungs and heart are working.
A chest ultrasound can look at these areas:
Your doctor may also use ultrasound to see how blood flows through the organs in your chest.
The doctor uses a small, handheld device (probe or transducer) to make the images of your chest. The transducer sends out sound waves that bounce off your organs and other structures. The sound waves are too high-pitched for you to hear. The transducer then picks up the bounced sound waves. These are made into pictures of your organs.
Your doctor can add another device called a Doppler probe to the transducer. This probe lets your doctor hear the sound waves the transducer sends out. They can hear how fast blood is flowing through a blood vessel. The doctor can also hear in which direction it is flowing. No sound or a faint sound may mean that you have a blockage in the flow.
Ultrasound is safe to have during pregnancy. It does not use radiation. It does not use dye, so it is safe for people who are allergic to contrast dye.
You may need a chest ultrasound if your doctor thinks you have extra fluid in your chest. This is especially true if the amount of fluid is small.
A chest ultrasound can also be used to:
Chest ultrasound may be used along with other types of imaging tests to diagnose chest conditions. These other tests include CT scans, X-rays, and MRI.
Your doctor may have other reasons to advise a chest ultrasound.
A chest ultrasound has no risk from radiation. Most people have no discomfort from the transducer moving across the skin.
Certain things can make a chest ultrasound less accurate, such as:
You may have a chest ultrasound as an outpatient. This means you go home the same day. Or it may be done as part of your stay in a hospital. The way the test is done may vary. It will depend on your condition and your doctor's practices.
Generally, a chest ultrasound follows this process:
A chest ultrasound is not painful. But you may have some discomfort from having to stay still during the test. The gel will also feel cool and wet. The technologist will use all possible comfort measures. They will do the scan as quickly as possible to minimize any discomfort.
You don't need any special care after a chest ultrasound. Your doctor may give you other instructions depending on your situation.
Before you agree to the test or procedure, make sure you know: