X-ray Reference

← Back to library

radiographic finding

Elevated Hemidiaphragm

A chest X-ray finding where one side of the diaphragm sits higher than expected

An elevated hemidiaphragm means one side of the diaphragm appears higher than expected on chest X-ray.

When one hemidiaphragm sits higher than expected on the X-ray, radiologists describe it as elevated. Sometimes this reflects low lung volume, and sometimes it points to diaphragm or abdominal causes.

Disclaimer: Educational information only. Not diagnosis, prescribing advice, or treatment guidance for an individual user.
Reference example

Representative X-ray

Representative annotated X-ray not available for this topic yet.

We only show a representative image when there is a clean corresponding source in the current reference set.

What it is

  • An elevated hemidiaphragm is a descriptive imaging finding
  • It can reflect volume loss in the lung, diaphragmatic weakness or paralysis, abdominal pressure, eventration, or postoperative change

How it appears on chest X-ray

  • Radiologists compare the two diaphragms, look for associated volume loss or basal opacity, and assess whether the contour is smooth, chronically elevated, or newly changed

What radiologists look for

  • Key questions include whether the finding is chronic, whether there is adjacent lower-lobe atelectasis, and whether the cause is thoracic, diaphragmatic, or abdominal

How X-ray helps

  • Chest X-ray can identify the asymmetry and often suggest whether there is accompanying lower-lobe volume loss or another thoracic clue

Common causes

  • Causes include atelectasis, phrenic nerve dysfunction, diaphragmatic eventration, abdominal distention, subphrenic processes, postoperative change, and chronic volume loss

Symptoms / associated symptoms

  • Some people have no symptoms, while others may have shortness of breath, postoperative discomfort, or symptoms related to the underlying thoracic or abdominal cause

Risk factors

  • Risk factors depend on the cause and may include recent surgery, trauma, chronic lung disease, neurologic disease, or abdominal pathology

Why it can matter clinically

  • The importance depends on why the diaphragm is elevated and whether there is meaningful lung-volume loss or an underlying structural problem

When to seek medical care

  • New breathing symptoms, postoperative decline, or an unexplained new elevated hemidiaphragm should be reviewed clinically

Evaluation and diagnosis

  • Evaluation may include prior-image comparison, ultrasound, fluoroscopic sniff testing, CT, or further thoracic and abdominal assessment

Treatment approaches

  • Treatment depends on the cause and may involve observation, respiratory follow-up, postoperative monitoring, or addressing the underlying thoracic or abdominal problem

FAQ

Is an elevated hemidiaphragm always serious?

Not always. Some cases are chronic or incidental, but new changes can need further review.

Can atelectasis cause an elevated hemidiaphragm?

Yes. Volume loss in the lung can pull the diaphragm upward.