Chest Exam Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards
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Adjacent to the sternal angle/angle of louis is the…
….2nd rib - beneath that is the 2nd intercostal space
Importance of the costochondrial cartilage
Allows for mobility of the thorax upon inspiration
Emergent pleural decompression/needle decompression of the thorax
Emergency procedure to treat patient with tension pneumothorax via large bore needle placed in the 2nd intercostal space mid clavicular line just over 3rd rib to convert a tension pneumothorax (characterized by air able to enter the cavity but not exit it causing it to grow and put pressure on organs every time it inspiration occurs) to a simple pneumothorax
Importance of listening in all lung fields anteriorally and posteriorally
The orientation of the different lobes are situated that only doing the posterior lung fields only reaches the lower lobes, must do anterior and posterior to reach all areas
Inspection on the chest exam (5)
- assess comfort (tripoding) and breathing pattern
- look for accessory muscle use
- assess skin color (lips and nails cyanosis or clubbing)
- look for barrel chest
- Look for tracheal deviations or spine/chest deformities (scoliosis, kyphosis, pectus excavatum or carinatum)
Normal nail bed angle vs clubbed finger nail bed angle
160 degrees, greater than 180 degrees with enlargement and curving of nails
Tripoding
Positioning of patient where they are leaning forward with hands on knees indicating dyspnea
Barrel chest
Chronic expansion of the chest wall causing ap to lateral ratio to go from a healthy 1:2 to 1:1 often seen with conditions such as COPD
Most common population to experience kyphosis and why?
Elderly, due to compression fractures
Palpation on chest exam (3)
- Chest expansion (hands should move symmetrically, asymmetry may occur with air or fluid in pleural space)
- Tactile fremitus (ulnar surface of hand say 99 at diff points)
- palpation for pain (fracture or injury)
Only pathophysiology associated with increased tactile fremitus, what is associated with decreased fremitus? (3)
- Consolidation of the lungs associated with pneumonia
- Pleural effusion, COPD, pneumothorax, etc.
Increased fremitus mech of action, decreased fremitus mech of action
- Consolidated lungs are hardened and full of solid material in the lobe (pus, blood, mucus all hardens)
- they conduct vibration better than airfilled lung tissue
- Pleural effusion sees fluid buildup in the pleural space around the lung
- sound is not transmitted as easily due to a muffler over the lung itself
Pleximeter vs plexor
Pleximeter is the DIP or placed against patient with varying pressure depending on how loud the sound is wanted to be, plexor is the striking finger
The 5 notes of percussion of the chest and what they indicate
Flat - effusion Dull - pneumonia resonant - healthy hyperresonant - COPD, pneumothorax tympanic - pneumothorax
Percussion on chest exam (2)
- Percuss in ladder pattern
- measure diaphragmatic excursion (find diaphragm by percussing down till dull, have patient inhale, percuss down till dull, mark, have patient exhale, percuss up till dull and mark, should measure 3-5 cm)