Title: Thorax and Lungs
1Chapter 15
2A P of Thorax
- Thorax
- Pleura
- Parietal external surface
- Visceral internal surface
- Mediastinum or interpleural space
- Bronchi bifurcate T4/5 post, sternal angle ant
- Right - more vertical, ?risk aspiration
- Left
- Alveoli
- Diaphragm (R5 ICS MCL, L6ICS MCL)
- phrenic nerve
- External intercostal muscles
- inspir ext ICM contract
- expir int ICM contract
- Accessory muscles
- scalene, sternocleidomastoid, trapezius,
abdominal rectus
3A P of Thorax Sternum Ribs Intercostal
spaces
4Anatomy Lungs
- Right lung three lobes
- Left lung two lobes
- Apex
- Base
- Midclavicular line (MCL)
- Midaxillary line (MAL)
5Anatomy Lungs
6Thoracic Anatomic Topography
- Anterior axillary line
- Midspinal (vertebral) line
- Midsternal line
- Posterior axillary line
- Scapular line
7Thoracic Anatomic Topography
8Physiology of Respiration
- Ventilation
- active inspiration and passive expiration
- during inspiration ? pressure inside lungs
subatmospheric as diaphragm ext ICM contract
?diaphragm lowers ribs elevate which
?intrapulmonic volume creating a neg
intra-alveolar pressure gradient with the
atmosphere so air is pulled into the lungs until
the intra-alveolar pressure air pressure, thus
lungs become full with air. - Expiration occurs more rapidly. The diaphragm and
ext ICM relax, which means the diaphragm rises
the ribs move closer ?volume in the thoracic
cavity causing a ? intrapulmonic volume ?
intrapulmonic pressure above atmospheric
pressure, the lungs recoil and expel air until
the intrapulmonic pressure atmospheric
pressure. - External respiration- O2 diffuses from alveoli to
blood - Internal respiration - O2 in the blood diffuses
into tissues - Control of breathing- neural and chemical factors
- pons medulla CNS structures responsible for
involuntary respiration - stimulus for breathing ? Co2, ?PH, ?O2 levels
9Health History
- Patient profile
- Age
- Children and young adults bronchiectasis, cystic
fibrosis - Adults and older adults lung cancer, chronic
bronchitis, pneumonia, emphysema - Gender
- Patient profile (contd)
- Race
- African American sarcoidosis
- Caucasian cystic fibrosis
(continues)
10Common Chief Complaints
- Dyspnea
- Cough
- Sputum
- Chest pain
11Characteristics of Chief Complaint
- Quality
- Quantity
- Associated manifestations
- Aggravating factors
- Alleviating factors
- Setting
- Timing
12Past Health History
- Medical
- Respiratory specific
- Nonrespiratory specific
- Surgical
- Medications
- Communicable diseases
- Allergies
- Injuries and accidents
- Special needs
- Childhood illnesses
13Family Health History
- Allergies
- Asthma
- Bronchiectasis
- Cancer
- Cystic fibrosis
- Emphysema
- TB
14Social History
- Alcohol, drug, or tobacco use
- Travel history
- Work and home environment
- Hobbies and leisure activities
- Stress
- Economic status
15Health Maintenance Activities
- Sleep
- Diet
- Exercise
- Use of safety devices
- Health check-ups
16Assessment of the Thorax and Lungs
- Equipment
- Stethoscope
- Centimeter ruler or tape measure
- Washable marker
- Watch with second hand
17Inspection
- Shape of thorax
- Transverse diameter
- Anteroposterior (AP) diameter
- Symmetry of chest wall
- Presence of superficial veins
- Costal angle
(continues)
18Assessment of Thorax Lungs
- Inspect shape of thorax
- Transverse diameter
- Anteroposterior (AP) diameter
- NAP to transverse 12
- Symmetry of chest wall
- Presence of superficial veins
- Abnormal
- barrel chest dt COPD
- pectus carinatum dt congenital abn
- kyphosis humpback
- scoliosis curvature of spine
19Assessment of Thorax Lungs
- Costal angle
- Nlt90 ?with inspir expir
- Angle of the ribs
- N ribs articulate at 45 ?angle
- Intercostal spaces
- N No retractions or bulging in ICS
- Muscles of respiration
- N no use of accessory muscles
20Respirations
- Rate N 12-20 bpm for adult
- Abnormalities
- Eupnea 1220 breaths per minute
- Tachypnea gt 20 breaths per minute
- Bradypnea lt 12 breaths per minute
- Apnea no respiration for 10 or more seconds
(continues)
21 Inspect Respiration
- Patterns
- N regular and even in rhythm
- Cheyne-Stokes-brain injury
- Biots or ataxic -damaged medulla
- Apneustic -injured pons
- Agonal - impending death
- Depth
- N nonexaggerated effortless
- Shallow -obese, pain, PE, puemonia, pneumothorax
- Hyperpnea - exercise, emotional, high altitudes
- Air trapping-COPD
- Kussmauls-diabetic ketoacidosis
- Sighing- N or CNS lesions
22Inspect Respirations
- Symmetry -
- N thorax rises falls in unison, no paradoxical
movement - Abnormal unilateral expansion dt collapsed lung
- paradoxical movement dt broken
ribs - Audibility
- N respirations are audible by ear
- Patient position
- N breaths comfortably upright, supine
- Abnormal Orthopnea dt COPD, CHF, PE
- Mode of breathing
- N inhale exhale through nose
23Inspect Sputum
- Color N light yellow or clear
- Odor N none
- Amount N small
- Consistency N thick or thin depends on
hydration - Abnormal
- Table 15-1
24Assessing Patients with Respiratory Assistive
Devices
- Oxygen therapy
- Mode of delivery
- Percentage of oxygen
- Flow rate
- Humidification
- Incentive spirometer
- Frequency of use, volume achieved, number of
repetitions - Endotracheal tube
- Size
- Nasal or oral insertion
- Length of tube as it exits mouth or nose
- Cuff inflated or deflated
- Tracheostomy tube
- Size
- Cuffed or cuffless
- How tube is secured to neck
- Mechanical ventilation
- Type of ventilator
- FiO2 setting
- Mode
- Amount of PEEP
- Rate and tidal volume
- Alarms
- Pulse oximeter
- Peak flow Meter
25Thoracic Palpation
- Palpate the Anterior, Posterior Lateral thorax
- Assess for
- Pulsations
- Masses
- Thoracic tenderness
- Crepitus
- N no pulsations, masses, tenderness,crepitus
- Abnormal
- aortic aneurysm
- tumor or cyst
- chest trama
- subcutaneous emphysema (air in subcutaneous
tissue)
26Thoracic Palpation
- Thoracic expansion
- Expansion
- Symmetry
- Tactile fremitus
- Anterior
- Posterior
- Lateral
(continues)
27Thoracic Palpation
- Thoracic expansion
- Expansion
- Symmetry
28Thoracic Palpation
- Tactile fremitus
- Anterior, Posterior, Lateral
- N buzzing over bronchi trachea
- Abnormal ? dt consolidation
- ? dt pneumothorax,
emphysema, asthma
29Palpation Pattern for Tactile Fremitus
30Thoracic Percussion
- Anterior
- Posterior
- Right and left lateral
- Diaphragmatic excursion
-
Pt position for Posterior Percussion
31Percussion Patterns
32Diaphragmatic Excursion
- Percuss lung while pt resting mark thorax
- Percuss lung while pt takes a deep breath mark
thorax - Measure distance btwn two marks
- Repeat other lung
- N T12 on inspir, T 10 on expir
33Auscultation Fields
34Auscultation Breath Sounds
- Bronchial
- Bronchovesicular
- Vesicular
35Auscultation Breath Sounds
- Assess for Pitch, Intensity, Quality, Duration,
Location - N Table 15-2
- Abnormal
- Adventitious Breath Sounds
- Crackles - moisture in airways
- Wheeze - narrowing of airway
- Pleural friction rub - inflamed parietal
viseral pleura - Stridor - partial obstruction
36Assessment of Voice Sounds
- Reveals if lungs are full of air, fluid or solid
- Instruct pt to say 99 each time you place
stethescope - N Muffled or unclear transmission
- Abnormal dt any type of consolidation
- Bronchophony - clear transmission of 99
- Egophony - transmission of ee to ay with
?intensity - Whispered pectoriloquy - clear transmission of
99 - Voice sounds absent - dt ?air in lungs from
disease - emphysema,asthma pneumothorax
37Age-Related Changes
- Anatomic changes
- Limited chest wall expansion
- Muscle atrophy
- Increased work of breathing
- Alveolar gas exchange
- Decreased surface area for diffusion
(continues)
38Age-Related Changes
- Regulation of ventilation
- Decreased sensitivity to changes in carbon
dioxide and oxygen - Lung defense mechanisms
- Decreased ciliary action
- Diminished cough reflex
- Increased susceptibility to infection