X Ray Clavicle Lateral View

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X Ray Clavicle Lateral View
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X Ray Clavicle Lateral View, in Visit Clinic

A side X-ray image of the collarbone to check for fractures, alignment issues, and bone problems in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a X Ray Clavicle Lateral View Test in Visit Clinic?

An X-ray lateral view of the clavicle takes a side picture of the collarbone and nearby shoulder area. It shows bone shape, alignment, and any breaks or displacements. The clavicle helps stabilize the shoulder and transmits forces from the arm to the body. This view is important after falls, blows, or when there is shoulder pain or swelling. Doctors use it to find fractures, dislocations, infections, bone tumors, and to check healing after treatment. It also helps plan whether a cast, sling, or surgery is needed and to confirm the position of any surgical hardware.

X Ray Clavicle Lateral View Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

X Ray Clavicle Lateral View Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The X Ray Clavicle Lateral View test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a X Ray Clavicle Lateral View Test in Visit Clinic?

X Ray Clavicle Lateral View is commonly ordered by emergency or orthopaedic teams for trauma or ongoing shoulder pain. It is used when patients have a fall, direct shoulder blow, visible deformity, or difficulty moving the arm. The image helps diagnose fractures, dislocations, infections, and some tumors, and to monitor fracture healing or hardware placement. Abnormal findings often come from injuries, osteoporosis, infection, or rarely bone disease in the family.

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Frequently asked questions

For any unanswered questions, reach out to our support team via email. We will assist you as soon as possible

What is the best X-ray view for clavicle in Visit Clinic?plus

The best routine radiographic view for the clavicle is an AP axial (cephalic angulation) projection, typically with a 15–30° cephalic tilt. This projects the clavicle above thoracic structures, visualizes the entire bone from sternoclavicular to acromioclavicular ends, and better shows fractures and displacement. Upright positioning is preferred; supplementary 0° AP or oblique views can be added if needed.

How to X-ray a clavicle in Visit Clinic?plus

Position the patient upright or supine with the clavicle centered on the detector. Obtain an AP view and an AP axial (15–30° cephalic tilt) to project the clavicle above the ribs; a PA axial or lordotic view can help visualize the medial end. Center the beam at mid‑clavicle, immobilize the arm, instruct breath hold, use lead shielding, and follow radiation‑safety protocols.

What is the positioning position for clavicle X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

Position patient upright or supine with shoulders relaxed and arms by sides. Center the image receptor to the mid‑clavicle so the entire clavicle, including AC and SC joints, is visualized. For an AP view direct the central ray perpendicular to the mid‑clavicle; for an AP axial view angle the CR 15–30° cephalad toward the mid‑clavicle. Instruct the patient to suspend respiration during exposure.

What are the two views of the clavicle in Visit Clinic?plus

The two standard clavicle radiographic views are: 1) anteroposterior (AP) view — a straight frontal projection of the entire clavicle; and 2) an AP cephalic-tilt (axial) view — the x‑ray beam angled cephalad (commonly 15–45°) to better profile the bone. They help detect fracture location, alignment and joint involvement.

What are the 3 views of the shoulder X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

The three standard shoulder X‑ray views are: Anteroposterior (AP) — shows the glenohumeral joint, proximal humerus and acromioclavicular joint; often done with external or internal rotation. Scapular Y (lateral) — assesses humeral head position relative to the glenoid, useful for dislocations and scapular fractures. Axillary (axillary lateral) — visualizes joint space and detects anterior/posterior dislocation or glenoid rim fractures.

Will a chest X-ray show the clavicle in Visit Clinic?plus

A standard chest X‑ray usually includes the clavicles, showing their medial and often lateral ends, so it can detect obvious clavicle injuries. However, chest X‑rays aren’t optimized for detailed clavicle assessment; dedicated clavicle views (or CT for complex cases) provide clearer visualization and more accurate fracture detection. If a clavicle injury is suspected, request targeted imaging.