atelectasis and tactile fremitus

Nurses General Nursing

Published

In Jarvis, she says that with atelectasis there will be decreased tactile fremitus

In Lewis, she says with atelectasis there will be increased tactile fremitus

Which is it?

I vote with Jarvis, but remember that atelectasis is a broad term referring to collapse of anything from the bronchi on down. So, you could have a narrowing that would be called atelectasis, causing increased fremitus due to the action of the air flow to the lobe below the narrowing.

In general, though, collapse of alveoli reduces fremitus. IMHO.

Specializes in Infection Preventionist/ Occ Health.

I looked back on my lecture notes and it says decreased. However, we used Jarvis so the professor could have been going off what the textbook said.

Specializes in Almost everywhere.

Somewhere, I was led to associate decreased tactile fremitus with atelectasis and increased with pneumonia and tumors. But, I have been wrong before.

Decreased is correct. I get this frequently and the lung sounds are very much decreased in the areas where it is. It can be painful at times too.

Who actually assesses for tactile fremitus? :uhoh21:

Who actually assesses for tactile fremitus? :uhoh21:

Thank you. I was feeling pretty inadequate there.

Oldiebutgoodie:uhoh3:

Specializes in LTC, med-surg.

Palpation

Palpation involves touching the chest wall in order to evaluate underlying structure and function, and is used to confirm or rule out suspected problems identified by the interview, history, and initial inspection. Palpation is generally performed to:

    • evaluate vocal fremitus

    • estimate thoracic expansion

    • assess the chest’s skin and subcutaneous tissues

The term fremitus refers to the vibrations that are transmitted through lung tissues and the chest wall whenever a vocal sound is made. When these vibrations are felt on the chest wall during palpation, they are called tactile fremitus. A comparison of these vibrations between both lungs is performed. There are differences in fremitus between men and women, and fat and thin people, but a comparison of fremitus within an individual is what needs to be noted.

To palpate for fremitus, the RCP places palmar aspect of the fingers or the ulnar aspect of the hand against the chest and has the patient repeat the number "99." All areas of the chest should be compared, both front and back. Fremitus should be equal over all areas of normal lung tissue except over the right upper lobe, where it increases because the bronchus is closer to the chest wall. Tactile fremitus increases in intensity whenever the density of lung tissue increases, such as in consolidation or fibrosis, and will decrease when a lung space is occupied with an increase of fluid or air (e.g., pleural effusion, pneumothorax and emphysema). The causes of abnormal tactile fremitus include:

Increased:

    • Pneumonia
    • Lung tumor or mass
    • Pulmonary fibrosis
    • Atelectasis

Decreased

Unilateral

    • Bronchial obstruction with mucus plug or foreign object
    • Pleural effusion
    • Pneumothorax

Diffuse

    • Muscular or obese chest wall
    • Chronic obstructive lung disease

Palpable vibrations referred to as rhonchial fremitus may be produced by the passage of air through airways containing thick secretions. Rhonchial fremitus often identified during inhalation and exhalation may clear if the patient produces an effective cough. It is frequently associated with a low-pitched, coorifice sound that can be heard without using a stethoscope.

http://www.ceu.org/cecourses/98730/ch4a.htm

thanks everybody

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