- What is it:
- A pleural tag refers to:
- A fibrotic band or soft tissue strand
- that extends from the pleura into the adjacent lung parenchyma.
- These tags often indicate:
- Pleural-lung interaction caused by:
- Neoplastic,
- Inflammatory, or
- Fibrotic processes.
- The clinical significance varies and depends on:
- Associated imaging findings, and
- Whether the process is benign or malignant.
- Etymology:
- Derived from the Latin word tagare (to fasten), describing the connective strand attaching the pleura to the lung.
- AKA:
- Pleural tether, Pleural band.
- How does it appear on each relevant imaging modality:
- Chest X-ray:
- May appear as:
- Subtle linear opacities,
- Extending from the pleura into the lung,
- Often difficult to detect.
- Chest CT:
- Parts:
- Fibrous or soft tissue bands,
- Extending from the pleura into the adjacent lung parenchyma.
- Size:
- Thin, elongated structures,
- Varying thickness depending on the cause.
- Shape:
- Linear,
- Curvilinear, or
- Irregular bands.
- Position:
- Adjacent to pleural-based lesions, or
- Within areas of pleural thickening.
- Character:
- Soft tissue density,
- Often associated with pleural thickening or retraction.
- Time:
- Stable in benign cases,
- Progressing or changing with malignancy or active inflammation.
- MRI:
- May reveal:
- The nature of the tag,
- Differentiating fibrosis from tumor extension.
- These findings reflect:
- Benign processes:
- Inflammatory fibrosis,
- Organizing pneumonia,
- Post-surgical or post-traumatic changes.
- Malignant processes:
- Peripheral lung cancer with pleural involvement,
- Mesothelioma, or
- Metastatic disease causing pleural retraction.
- Differential diagnosis:
- Benign:
- Post-inflammatory or post-traumatic pleural thickening.
- Organizing pneumonia.
- Post-surgical changes (e.g., after thoracic surgery or pleurodesis).
- Malignant:
- Peripheral lung cancer or mesothelioma with pleural involvement.
- Pleural metastases causing tethering.
- Fibrotic processes:
- Rounded atelectasis with adjacent pleural tethering.
- Asbestos-related pleural fibrosis.
- Recommendations:
- Evaluate with Chest CT for detailed characterization of the pleural tag, associated pleural thickening, and adjacent lung abnormalities.
- Correlate findings with clinical history and risk factors, such as:
- Smoking,
- Asbestos exposure, or
- Prior malignancy.
- Consider PET-CT or biopsy if the pleural tag is associated with:
- A suspicious lesion, or
- Features suggesting malignancy.
- Monitor benign-appearing pleural tags with serial imaging.
- Key points and pearls:
- Pleural tags often reflect pleural-lung interaction caused by neoplastic, inflammatory, or fibrotic processes.
- Stability over time on imaging suggests a benign process, while progressive change raises suspicion for malignancy.
- Malignant pleural tags often accompany:
- Irregular pleural thickening, or
- Retraction of adjacent lung tissue.
- PET-CT is valuable for assessing metabolic activity and distinguishing benign from malignant processes.
-
TCV