Lung Examination
Lung Examination
Lung Examination
Breathing pattern
Bradypnea
Respiratory rate < 12/min in adults
Tachypnea
Respiratory rate > 20/min, shallow breathing in adults
Nail clubbing: physical finding characterized by painless swelling of the distal phalanges,
typically associated with chronic hypoxemia
.
Sputum production or secretions:
White and translucent: viral infection (for example, bronchitis that presents
with a typical early-morning cough)
White and foamy: pulmonary edema
Yellow-green: bacterial infection
Green: an indication of a pseudomonal infection
Grayish: pneumoconiosis, a waning bacterial infection
Blackish-brown: possibly old blood; should be further investigated (can also be
a harmless incidental finding)
Friable: tuberculosis, actinomycosis
Palpation
Evaluate areas of tenderness or bruising
Symmetry of chest expansion
Place both hands on the patient's back at the level of the 10th ribs with thumbs pointing medially and parallel to the
rib cage.
As the patient inhales, evaluate for asymmetric movement of your thumbs.
Tactile fremitus
Ask the patient to say “99” and feel for vibrations transmitted throughout the chest wall.
Can be asymmetrically decreased in effusion, obstruction, or pneumothorax, among others
Can be asymmetrically increased in pneumonia
Percussion
Physiological finding: resonant percussion note → a comparatively hollow and loud note
Pathological findings:
Hyper-resonant percussion note
Louder and hollower than normal
Sign of increased air inside the thoracic cavity: emphysema, bronchial asthma, pneumothorax
Vesicular breathing
Soft and low pitched, through inspiration and part of
expiration
Heard over both lungs
Bronchovesicular breathing
Intermediate intensity and pitch, through both inspiration
and expiration
Heard over 1st and 2ndintercostal spaces
Bronchial breathing
Loud and high pitched, through part of inspiration and all
of expiration
Heard over the sternum
Tracheal breathing
Very loud and high pitched, through both inspiration and
expiration
Heard over the neck
Pathological breath sounds
Consider secretions (such as in bronchitis) if breath sounds clear after
coughing
Types of pathological breath sounds
Crackles or rales: discontinuous, intermittent
Fine: soft, high-pitched (e.g., normal, asbestosis, sarcoidosis)
Coarse: loud, low-pitched (e.g., COPD, pulmonary edema)
Wheezes (sibilant wheezing): musical, prolonged Rhonchi (sonor wheezing): low-pitched, snoring
Stridor: high-pitched, over trachea which may occur on:
Inspiration and expiration (biphasic stridor): obstruction at the level of the glottis