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Pulmonary Exam

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Palpation. Chest excursion on deep inspiration. Abnormal chest ... Pulmonary: Clear to auscultation and palpation bilaterally. No wheezes, rhonchi, or rales. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pulmonary Exam


1
Pulmonary Exam
  • Jessica Shin, MS4
  • December 6, 2006

2
Anatomy
3
Anatomy
4
Vital Signs
  • Temperature
  • Respiratory rate (14-20/min)
  • Heart rate (80-100 bpm)
  • BP (120/80)
  • SpO2 (95-100 on room air)

5
General Survey
  • Evidence of respiratory distress, effort of
    breathing
  • Use of accessory muscles
  • Retractions
  • Nasal flaring, pursed lip breathing
  • Breathing
  • Audible wheezes, stridor (large airway
    obstruction)
  • Position of trachea
  • Deviation due to pleural effusion, PTX,
    atelectasis

6
General Survey
  • Color (skin, nails)
  • Cyanosis
  • Clubbing

7
Areas to Examine
  • Posterior Chest
  • Patient sitting up
  • Anterior Chest
  • Patient supine

8
Pulmonary Exam
  • Inspection
  • Palpation
  • Percussion
  • Auscultation

9
Inspection of the Chest
  • Deformities or asymmetry
  • Shape of the chest
  • Pectus excavatum/carinatum
  • Barrel chest (COPD)
  • Flail chest (multiple rib fractures)
  • Kyphosis/Scoliosis
  • Increased effort of breathing
  • Retractions
  • Impaired respiratory movement
  • Trauma, masses
  • Old surgical scars, skin lesions

10
Palpation
  • Assess tender areas, lesions

11
Palpation
  • Chest excursion on deep inspiration
  • Abnormal chest excursions
  • Splinting
  • Bronchial obstruction
  • Pleural effusion
  • Lobar pneumonia

12
Palpation
  • Tactile fremitus
  • Absent or decreased tactile fremitus
  • Bronchial obstruction
  • COPD
  • Pneumothorax
  • Tumor
  • Pleural effusion
  • Increased tactile fremitus
  • Consolidation (lobar pneumonia)

13
Tactile Fremitus
  • Consolidation versus pleural effusion

14
Percussion
  • Percuss symmetrically, avoiding the scapula
    (12-14 spots)
  • Tap out the diaphragm
  • Quiet respiration (asymmetry?)
  • Full inspiration and expiration (5-6cm at most)

15
Percussion
16
Auscultation
  • Have patient breathe deeply through an open mouth
  • Auscultate top to bottom, alternating from side
    to side

17
Auscultation
  • Vesicular
  • Most of lungs
  • Soft, low pitched, IgtE
  • Bronchovesicular
  • 1st, 2nd interspaces, between scapulae
  • Medium intensity, medium pitch, IE
  • Bronchial
  • Manubrium
  • Loud, high pitched, EgtI
  • Tracheal
  • Trachea
  • Very loud, high pitched, IE
  • Absent or decreased breath sounds
  • ARDS
  • Asthma
  • Atelectasis
  • Pneumothorax
  • Bronchial breath sounds
  • Consolidation

18
Adventitious Sounds
  • Crackles/rales (sounds like velcro)
  • Fine (shorter, higher pitched, softer)
  • Coarse (longer, lower pitched, louder)
  • Wheezes
  • Rhonchi (sounds like snoring)
  • Stridor (predominantly inspiratory, louder in the
    neck than over the chest wall -gt large airway
    obstruction)

19
Characterizing Adventitious Sounds
  • Inspiratory or expiratory?
  • Location (where in the lung fields)
  • Number (lots or few)
  • Do they clear with coughing?

20
Transmitted Sounds
  • Bronchophony
  • Egophony
  • Normal eee
  • Egophony
  • Whispered pectoriloquy

21
Pulmonary Exam Normal Lungs
  • Vital signs
  • General Patient is well-appearing, in no
    apparent distress.
  • Skin No cyanosis or clubbing.
  • Pulmonary Clear to auscultation and palpation
    bilaterally. No wheezes, rhonchi, or rales.

22
Lobar Pneumonia
  • Trachea Midline
  • Percussion Dullness to percussion over the area
    of consolidation
  • Breath sounds Bronchial breath sounds over the
    area of consolidation
  • Tactile fremitus Increased over consolidation
  • Adventitious sounds Late inspiratory crackles
  • Egophony, whispered pectoriloquy, and
    bronchophony

23
Emphysema
  • Trachea Midline
  • Percussion Diffusely hyperresonant
  • Breath sounds Decreased to absent
  • Tactile fremitus, transmitted voice sounds
    Decreased
  • Adventitious sounds None

24
Extras - General Survey
  • Fingernails
  • Clubbing
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