Abdominal Exam Flashcards
1
Q
General components of abdominal exam
A
- Inspect
- Auscultate
- Percuss
- Palpate
- Rebound/CVA tenderness
2
Q
abdominal inspection technique
A
Patient supine, expose abdomen from sternum to pubis with gown/drape to maintain modesty
Skin: color, lesions, scars, dilated veins
Size, contour and symmetry
With patient’s head lifted
3
Q
abdominal auscultation technique
A
Auscultate (always auscultate before percussion/palpation):
Bowel sounds(all four quadrants, 5-10 secs each)
Bruits (renal and aortic)
4
Q
abdominal percussion technique
A
All four quadrants: tympany, dullness
Liver span (may use scratch test)
5
Q
abdominal palpation technique
A
Palpate: Light palpation all four quadrants Deep palpation all four quadrants Check for Murphy’s sign Palpate McBurney’s point Test for Rovsing’s sign Liver, spleen, aorta
6
Q
Liver span technique
A
- Begin in the lower right quadrant (want to be sure to start low enough to detect enlargement if present)
- Percuss up the midclavicular line until dullness is heard, this is the lower liver border
- Then, find an area of lung resonance on the right side of the chest, may need to displace breast tissue to hear
- Percuss down the midclavicular line until dullness is heard, this is the upper liver border
- Normal liver span is 6-12 cm (men typically have larger spans than women)
7
Q
Murphy’s test technique
A
- A positive test is indicative of hepatic or gallbladder inflammation
- Palpate below the liver margin at the lateral border of the rectus abdominis muscle for gall bladder
- Ask patient to take a deep breath
- As the inflamed gall bladder comes in contact with the examiners fingers, the patient will experience pain and stop inspiration
8
Q
McBurney’s point technique
A
- Press firmly with fingers of right hand at 90°angle to abdomen in the RLQ, release quickly and assess patient’s reaction
- Pain w/rebound tenderness over the McBurney point suggests appendicitis
9
Q
Rovsings sign technique
A
- Press firmly with fingers of right hand at 90°angle to abdomen in the LLQ, release quickly and assess patient’s reaction
- LLQ is assessed but pain felt on right side - aka referred rebound tenderness