What does a positive Bronchophony mean?

What does a positive Bronchophony mean?

Bronchophony. This term represents a test to perform on the patient which may indicate that there is consolidation of the lung. Consolidation refers to increased density of the lung tissue, due to it being filled with fluid and/or blood or mucus.

What causes positive egophony?

Egophony (British English, aegophony) is an increased resonance of voice sounds heard when auscultating the lungs, often caused by lung consolidation and fibrosis. It is due to enhanced transmission of high-frequency sound across fluid, such as in abnormal lung tissue, with lower frequencies filtered out.

What is a positive whispered Pectoriloquy?

Positive: the examiner can clearly identify the words the patient is saying. This indicates an area of lung consolidation. Negative: muffled/undistinguishable words noted indicating normal lung tissue.

How do you know if Bronchophony is positive or negative?

Bronchophony:Ask the patient to say “99” in a normal voice. Listen to the chest with a stethoscope. The expected finding is that the words will be indistinct. Bronchophony is present if sounds can be heard clearly.

What is an abnormal bronchophony?

Bronchophony is the abnormal transmission of sounds from the lungs or bronchi. Bronchophony is a type of pectoriloquy.

What is bronchophony and egophony?

Bronchophony: Ask the patient to say “99” in a normal voice. Listen to the chest with a stethoscope. The expected finding is that the words will be indistinct. Bronchophony is present if sounds can be heard clearly. Egophony: While listening to the chest with a stethoscope, ask the patient to say the vowel “e”.

How do you check for whispered Pectoriloquy?

Whispered pectoriloquy: Ask the patient to whisper a sequence of words such as “one-two-three,” and listen with a stethoscope. Normally, only faint sounds are heard. However, over areas of tissue abnormality, the whispered sounds will be clear and distinct.

What is Auscultated bronchophony?

Interpretation. Normally, the sound of the patient’s voice becomes less distinct as the auscultation moves peripherally; bronchophony is the phenomenon of the patient’s voice remaining loud at the periphery of the lungs or sounding louder than usual over a distinct area of consolidation, such as in pneumonia.

What causes pectoriloquy?

Whispered pectoriloquy is a clinical test typically performed during a medical physical examination to evaluate for the presence of lung consolidation, causes of which include cancer (solid mass) and pneumonia (fluid mass).

How do you test whispered Pectoriloquy?

The sounds that can be assessed are: Whispered pectoriloquy: Ask the patient to whisper a sequence of words such as “one-two-three,” and listen with a stethoscope. Normally, only faint sounds are heard. However, over areas of tissue abnormality, the whispered sounds will be clear and distinct.