X Ray Coccyx Lateral and AP View

discountup to 50% off
Lab Tests
arrow
X Ray Coccyx Lateral and AP View
discountup to 50% off

X Ray Coccyx Lateral and AP View, in Visit Clinic

Images of your coccyx from the front and side to find fractures, misalignment, arthritis, or bone disease 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 Coccyx Lateral and AP View Test in Visit Clinic?

An X Ray Coccyx Lateral and AP View produces X-ray images of the coccyx, or tailbone, from the front and the side. It shows bone alignment, fractures, dislocations, and signs of arthritis or bone disease. This view helps locate breaks, degeneration, or unusual growths that can cause pain. Doctors use these images to find the cause of lower back or tailbone pain. They also use them to plan treatment, guide procedures, and check healing after injury. The test is quick and widely available. It involves very low radiation and is often the first imaging step for tailbone problems.

X Ray Coccyx Lateral and AP View Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

X Ray Coccyx Lateral and AP View Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

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

  • Single test

Why Take a X Ray Coccyx Lateral and AP View Test in Visit Clinic?

X Ray Coccyx Lateral and AP View is an imaging study commonly ordered as part of a pelvic or spinal evaluation. It is used when patients report tailbone pain after a fall, childbirth, or prolonged sitting. The test helps diagnose fractures, dislocations, arthritis, infections, or tumors. Abnormal findings often result from trauma, degeneration, infection, or bone disease, and a family history of bone problems may raise clinical concern.

How to Book a Test ?

Search & Add Test

Search by test names and add it to your cart

step-image
arrow-right

Select a Lab

Choose your preferred labs from top trusted partners

step-image
arrow-right

Select Date & Slot

Select a convenient date and time for your test

step-image
arrow-right

Pay & Book

Make payment and get confirmation within 2 hours

step-image

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 lateral positioning of the coccyx X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

Lateral positioning of the coccyx X‑ray is a true lateral projection with the patient lying or standing in lateral recumbent (hips and knees flexed for stability). The image receptor is centered on the coccyx and the central X‑ray beam is directed perpendicular to the film to include the distal sacrum and coccyx. Small-field collimation and suspended respiration reduce blur; used to detect fractures, dislocation, or degenerative change.

What is the difference between AP and lateral X rays in Visit Clinic?plus

Anteroposterior (AP) X‑ray passes the beam front-to-back; the patient is often supine or upright and anterior structures can be magnified, which may alter apparent heart and mediastinal size. Lateral X‑ray is taken side-to-side, giving a profile view that separates overlapping structures, shows depth, helps localize lesions, and better displays spinal alignment, retrosternal/retrocardiac detail, and air‑fluid levels.

What is the best view for the coccyx in Visit Clinic?plus

The optimal radiographic view for the coccyx is a true lateral projection. A lateral film best demonstrates coccygeal alignment, angulation, fractures and dislocations, whereas AP views are of limited value. Position the patient in a lateral recumbent or standing lateral posture with the X‑ray beam centered on the coccyx; oblique views are rarely necessary except for specific diagnostic questions.

What is the minimum of two views for X-ray sacrum and coccyx in Visit Clinic?plus

A minimum of two views are required: an anteroposterior (AP) view—commonly AP axial for the sacrum (about 15° cephalad) and AP axial for the coccyx (about 10° caudad) as appropriate—and a true lateral view of the sacrum/coccyx. These two projections assess alignment, fractures and degenerative change; axial angulation helps visualize the curved anatomy.

What is lat view in X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

“Lat view” (lateral view) is an X‑ray taken from the side, producing a side‑profile image of the body part. It complements frontal (AP/PA) views to show depth, alignment, air‑fluid levels and posterior structures without superimposition. Commonly used for chest, spine and joint imaging. The patient is positioned with the affected side against the detector so the X‑ray beam travels laterally through the body.

What X-ray shows coccyx in Visit Clinic?plus

A coccyx X‑ray—usually a lateral sacrococcygeal view, sometimes with an AP view—visualizes the tailbone vertebrae and their alignment. It detects fractures, dislocations, bone spurs, degenerative changes and gross malalignment, and helps evaluate causes of tailbone pain after trauma. If radiographs are inconclusive or soft‑tissue detail is needed, CT or MRI may be recommended.