Rad
Soft Tissue Neck XRay
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Soft Tissue Neck XRay
, Soft Tissue Neck Radiograph, XRay Soft Tissue Neck
See Also
Cervical Spine XRay
Croup
Epiglottitis
Retropharyngeal Abscess
Bacterial Tracheitis
Foreign Body Aspiration
Radiopaque Foreign Body
Technique
Technically difficult to obtain an adequate film in children (requires cooperation)
False Positive
prevertebral widening may occur with less ideal films
Good image requires patient cooperation
Should be a true lateral position film
Neck rotation can exaggerate the size of the epiglottis
Should be an inspiratory film (expiratory films exaggerate prevertebral space)
Neck neutral to neck extension
Crying may also cause a
False Positive
widening
Abnormal or non-diagnostic findings may prompt advanced imaging
CT Soft Tissue Neck with contrast
First-line study in adults (and second-line study to
XRay
in children)
Interpretation
Findings
Croup
"Steeple" sign on PA Neck
XRay
(40-50% of croup cases)
Narrowing of subglottic region from mucosal edema
XRay
does not correlate with croup severity
Dilated hypopharynx (most sensitive finding)
Images
From
MedPix
with permission.
Epiglottitis
Thickened, thumb shaped epiglottis (swollen supraglottis)
Diminished or loss of the vallecula air space
Thickened aryepiglottic folds
Distended hypopharynx
Cervical Spine
may demonstrate straightening or reversal of cervical lordosis (as with
Retropharyngeal Abscess
)
Test Sensitivity
44-76% (but >96% specific)
Retropharyngeal Abscess
Bulging of posterior pharyngeal wall
Loculated soft tissue gas may be seen in severe cases
Widening retropharyngeal soft tissue (prevertebral space)
Prevertebral soft tissue width increased (Mnemonic 6 at 2, and 22 at 6)
C2 level prevertebral space >7 mm (adults and children) or more than half
Vertebra
l body width
C6 level prevertebral space >14 mm (children) or >22 mm (adults) or more than a full
Vertebra
l body width
Cervical Spine
may demonstrate straightening or reversal of cervical lordosis
Bacterial Tracheitis
Thickened trachea
Tracheal pseudomembrane
Necrotic epithelium subdivides trachea lumen
Croup
findings (e.g. steeple sign) may coexist, as it may have preceded
Bacterial Tracheitis
References
Tubbs and Janicki (2025) Mastering Emergency Imaging, CCME, accessed 6/12/2026
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