“…It may contain a fluid level Pneumatocele-a thin-walled, air-filled space in the lung often associated with acute pneumonia, trauma, or aspiration of hydrocarbon fluid which is often transient. It may contain fluid (e.g., blood products in traumatic pneumatoceles) Sources: Harknett et al, 49 Zamora and Aeddula, 153 Waele et al, 154 Kil et al, 7 Vassallo et al, 26 Qin et al, 155 Watanabe et al, 81 Parambil et al, 156 Ito et al, 157 Natalini et al, 158 Lohrmann et al, 159 Martínez-Balzano et al, 160 Toro et al, 96 Dal Sasso et al, 161 Kyle et al, 162 Quock et al, 163 Zamora et al, 164 Berk et al, 165 Rajapreyar et al, 166 Baqir et al, 167 Sheard et al, 86 Zamora et al, 115 Willey et al, 168 Levy and Feingold, 169 Parvinian et al, 123 Kaul et al, 170 Remy-Jardin et al, 171 Hansell et al 172 Fig. 2 Axial chest CT in a 61-year-old female shows multiple bilateral parenchymal lucencies in the upper and lower lobes.…”