The initial investigations for suspected empyema remains
chest X-ray, although it cannot differentiate an empyema from uninfected parapneumonic effusion.
Ultrasound must be used to confirm the presence of a pleural fluid collection and can be used to estimate the size of the effusion, differentiate between free and loculated pleural fluid and guide
thoracocentesis if necessary. Chest
CT and
MRI do not provide additional information in most cases and should therefore not be performed routinely. On a CT scan, empyema fluid most often has a
radiodensity of about 0-20
Hounsfield units (HU), but gets over 30 HU when becoming more thickened with time. The most often used "golden" criteria for empyema are pleural effusion with macroscopic presence of pus, a positive
Gram stain or culture of pleural fluid, or a pleural fluid pH under 7.2 with normal peripheral blood pH. Clinical guidelines for adult patients therefore advocate diagnostic pleural fluid aspiration in patients with pleural effusion in association with
sepsis or pneumonic illness. Because pleural effusion in the pediatric population is almost always parapneumonic and the need for
chest tube drainage can be made on clinical grounds, British guidelines for the management of pleural infection in children do not recommend diagnostic pleural fluid sampling. File:UOTW 28 - Ultrasound of the Week 2.webm|Pleural empyema as seen on ultrasound File:UOTW 28 - Ultrasound of the Week 3.webm|Pleural empyema as seen on ultrasound File:UOTW 28 - Ultrasound of the Week 4.jpg|Pleural empyema as seen on ultrasound == Treatment ==