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Rib Notching

Normal Rib Notching

A small notch near the costo-vertebral joint is normal, so pathologic rib notching is more likely if the notching is more lateral.

Types of Pathological Rib Notching

1. Superior rib notching

2. Inferior rib notching (more common)

Inferior Rib Notching (Roesler’s sign)

Mechanism: Enlargement of one or more of the structures that lie in the subcostal groove (intercostal nerve, artery and vein) – the reason that you were tought to not insert the needle inferior to the ribs during thoracocentesis.

Causes:

1. Arterial collaterals:

2. Venous collaterals:

3. Neurogenic:

Superior Rib Notching

Mechanism: Distrubance of osteoblastic and osteoclastic activity and the stress effect of intercostal muscle.

Causes:

1. Abnormal osteoblastic activity:

2. Abnormal osteoclastic activity: Hyperparathyroidism

3. Intercostal muscle stress:

Both Inferior and Superior Notching

The diseases that can cause both superior and inferior rib notching are:

  1. Neurofibromatosis
  2. Hyperparathyroidism
  3. Coarctation of aorta with large collaterals
  4. Thalassemia

If both inferior and superior rib notching may be present, ribs may be called “ribbon ribs”.

Unilateral and Bilateral Rib Notching

Unilateral right sided inferior rib notching: coarctation at or proximal to the origin of left subclavian artery

Unilateral left sided inferior rib notching: coarctation proximal to an aberrant left subclavian artery

Other causes of unilateral inferior rib notching:

Bilateral symmetrical inferior rib notching: coarctation distal to left subclavian artery

Bilateral asymmetrical and irregular inferior rib notching: neurofibromatosis

References: Fundamentals of Diagnostic Radiology edited by William E. Brant, Clyde A. Helms

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