NEJM 2014 Fundamentals of Lung Auscultation
NEJM 2014 Fundamentals of Lung Auscultation
NEJM 2014 Fundamentals of Lung Auscultation
Abraham Bohadana, M.D., Gabriel Izbicki, M.D., and Steve S. Kraman, M.D.
N Engl J Med 2014; 370:744-751February 20, 2014DOI: 10.1056/NEJMra1302901
Chest auscultation has long been considered a useful part of the physical examination, going back to the time of
Hippocrates. However, it did not become a widespread practice until the invention of the stethoscope by Ren Lannec in
1816, which made the practice convenient and hygienic.During the second half of the 20th century, technological
advances in ultrasonography, radiographic computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance imaging shifted interest
from lung auscultation to imaging studies, which can detect lung disease with an accuracy never previously imagined.
However, modern computer-assisted techniques have also allowed precise recording and analysis of lung sounds,
prompting the correlation of acoustic indexes with measures of lung mechanics. This innovative, though still little used,
approach has improved our knowledge of acoustic mechanisms and increased the clinical usefulness of auscultation. In
this review, we present an overview of lung auscultation in the light of modern concepts of lung acoustics.
NOMENCLATURE
The traditional nomenclature for lung sounds suffers from imprecision. Therefore, in this article, we have adopted the
terminology proposed by the ad hoc committee of the International Lung Sounds Association. In this classification of lung
sounds, the term rale is replaced by crackle, since the adjectives often used to qualify rales (e.g., moist or dry) can
be misleading with regard to the means by which rales (or crackles) are produced. Crackle can be defined acoustically
and does not suggest any means or site of generation. The clinical characteristics of normal and adventitious sounds are
summarized in Table 1.
NORMAL RESPIRATORY SOUNDS
Tracheal Sounds
Tracheal auscultation is not frequently performed, but in certain situations it can convey important clinical information.
When heard at the suprasternal notch or the lateral neck, normal tracheal sounds characteristically contain a large
amount of sound energy and are easily heard during the two phases of the respiratory cycle (Figure 1). The frequencies of
these sounds range from 100 Hz to almost 5000 Hz, with a sharp drop in power at a frequency of approximately 800 Hz
and little energy beyond 1500 Hz. They are produced by turbulent airflow in the pharynx, glottis, and subglottic region.
Listening to tracheal sounds can be useful in a variety of circumstances. First, the trachea carries sound from within the
lungs, allowing auscultation of other sounds without filtering from the chest cage. Second, the characteristics of tracheal
sounds are similar in quality to the abnormal bronchial breathing heard in patients with lung consolidation. Third, in
patients with upper-airway obstruction, tracheal sounds can become frankly musical, characterized as either a typical
stridor or a localized, intense wheeze. Recognizing this tracheal wheeze is clinically important because when
auscultated over the lung, it is often mistakenly taken for the wheeze of asthma (as discussed in more detail below).
Finally, monitoring tracheal sounds is a noninvasive means of monitoring patients for the sleep apnea syndrome, although
for practical reasons such monitoring cannot be performed by means of auscultation with a stethoscope. Whereas the
stridorous breathing of a child with croup is easily recognized, stridor in adults, when caused by bronchial or tracheal
stenosis or by a tumor in the central airway, is more subtle. It may be missed when only the lungs are examined but is
obvious when heard over the trachea or larynx.
Lung, or Vesicular, Sounds
The sound of normal breathing heard over the surface of the chest is markedly influenced by the anatomical structures
between the site of sound generation and the site of auscultation. Characteristically, normal lung sounds are heard clearly
during inspiration but only in the early phase of expiration (Figure 1B). In sound analysis, the frequency range of normal
lung sounds appears to be narrower than that of tracheal sounds, extending from below 100 Hz to 1000 Hz, with a sharp
drop at approximately 100 to 200 Hz. The idea that vesicular sound is produced by air entering the alveoli (vesicles) is
incorrect. Indeed, modern concepts of physiology indicate that in the lung periphery gas molecules migrate by means of
diffusion from parts of the lung reached through bulk flow, a silent process. Most important, studies support the idea of a
double origin, with the inspiratory component generated within the lobar and segmental airways and the expiratory
component coming from more central sources.
Several mechanisms of vesicular sounds have been suggested, including turbulent flow, vortexes, and other, hitherto
unknown mechanisms. Clinically, a decrease in sound intensity is the most common abnormality. Mechanistically, this
loss of intensity can be due to a decrease in the amount of sound energy at the site of generation, impaired transmission,
or both. Sound generation can be decreased when there is a drop in inspiratory airflow, which can result from several
conditions, ranging from poor cooperation (e.g., a patient's unwillingness to take a deep breath) to depression of the
central nervous system (e.g., drug overdose). Airway conditions include blockage (e.g., by a foreign body or tumor) and
the narrowing that occurs in obstructive airway diseases (e.g., asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
[COPD]). The decrease in the intensity of breath sounds may be permanent, as in cases of pure emphysema, or
reversible, as in asthma (e.g., during a bronchial provocation test or an asthma attack).
Sound transmission can be impaired by intrapulmonary or extrapulmonary factors. The latter include conditions such as
obesity, chest deformities (e.g., kyphoscoliosis), and abdominal distention due to ascites. Intrapulmonary factors, which
can be harder to recognize, include disruption of the mechanical properties of the lung parenchyma (e.g., a combination of
hyperdistention and parenchymal destruction in emphysema) or the interposition of a medium between the source of
sound generation and the stethoscope that has a different acoustic impedance from that of the normal parenchyma (e.g.,
collections of gas or liquid in the pleural space pneumothorax, hemothorax, and intrapulmonary masses). Incidentally,
the development of lung consolidation, which occurs in pneumonia, results in decreased breath sounds only if the
embedded airways are blocked by inflammation or viscous secretions. If instead the airways are patent, sound
transmission is actually improved, increasing the expiratory component; this effect is characterized as bronchial
breathing (Figure 1C), which corresponds to the air bronchogram on chest radiographs.
ABNORMAL RESPIRATORY SOUNDS
Musical Sounds
Stridor
Stridor is a high-pitched, musical sound produced as turbulent flow passes through a narrowed segment of the upper
respiratory tract. It is often intense, being clearly heard without the aid of a stethoscope. In sound analysis it is
characterized by regular, sinusoidal oscillations with a fundamental frequency of approximately 500 Hz, often
accompanied by several harmonics (Figure 1D). Evaluating stridor is especially useful in patients in the intensive care unit
who have undergone extubation, when its appearance can be a sign of extrathoracic airway obstruction requiring prompt
intervention. In cases of such obstruction, stridor can be distinguished from wheeze because it is more clearly heard on
inspiration than on expiration and is more prominent over the neck than over the chest. Although stridor is usually
inspiratory, it can also be expiratory or biphasic. Other causes of stridor in adults include acute epiglottitis, airway edema
after device removal, anaphylaxis, vocal-cord dysfunction, inhalation of a foreign body, laryngeal tumors, thyroiditis, and
tracheal carcinoma.
The stridorous sound of vocal-cord dysfunction deserves special mention because it is often confused with asthma and is
responsible for numerous visits to the emergency department and hospitalizations. (Vocal-cord dysfunction, also called
paradoxical vocal-cord motion, is a respiratory condition characterized by the inappropriate adduction of the vocal cord
with resultant airflow limitation at the level of the larynx, accompanied by stridorous breathing.) In a revi ew of 95 patients
with vocal-cord dysfunction who were treated at the National Jewish Center, more than half carried an incorrect diagnosis
of asthma for years and most had been treated with substantial doses of glucocorticoids. These patients also had an
average of six hospitalizations yearly, and 28% had been intubated. In addition, several reports have documented the
costs of misdiagnosed vocal-cord dysfunction to the medical care system.
Wheeze
The wheeze is probably the most easily recognized adventitious sound. Its long duration, typically more than 100 msec,
allows its musical quality to be discerned by the human ear. In sound analysis the wheeze appears as sinusoidal
oscillations with sound energy in the range of 100 to 1000 Hz and with harmonics that exceed 1000 Hz on occasion
(Figure 1E). It is probably incorrect to credit high-pitched wheezes to the narrowing of peripheral airways and low-pitched
wheezes to the narrowing of central airways. Purportedly, wheezes are formed in the branches between the second and
seventh generations of the airway tree by the coupled oscillation of gas and airway walls that have been narrowed to the
point of apposition by a variety of mechanical forces. In addition, the model incorporates two principles: first, that although
wheezes are always associated with airflow limitation, airflow can be limited in the absence of wheezes, and second, that
the pitch of an individual wheeze is determined not by the diameter of the airway but by the thickness of the airway wall,
bending stiffness, and longitudinal tension.
Wheezes can be inspiratory, expiratory, or biphasic. Although typically present in obstructive airway diseases, especially
asthma, they are not pathognomonic of any particular disease. In asthma and COPD, wheezes can be heard all over the
chest, making their number difficult to estimate. Localized wheeze is often related to a local phenomenon, usually an
obstruction by a foreign body, mucous plug, or tumor. Failure to recognize this type of wheeze can have serious
consequences for patients, who often receive a misdiagnosis of difficult-to-treat asthma and are not referred to
appropriate specialists for months or even years after the initial evaluation. Wheezes may be absent in patients with
severe airway obstruction. In fact, the model cited above predicts that the more severe the obstruction, the lower the
likelihood of wheeze. The typical example is a severe asthma attack, a condition in which the low respiratory flows cannot
provide the energy necessary to generate wheezes (or any sounds). As a consequence, the accompanying normal breath
sound is also severely reduced or even absent, creating a clinical picture known as silent lung. As the obstruction is
relieved and airflow increases, both the wheeze and normal breath sounds reappear.
Finally, a word must be said about the rhonchus. This sound is considered to be a variant of the wheeze, differing from
the wheeze in its lower pitch typically near 150 Hz which is responsible for its resemblance to the sound of snoring
on auscultation (Figure 1F). The rhonchus and the wheeze probably share the same mechanism of generation, but the
rhonchus, unlike the wheeze, may disappear after coughing, which suggests that secretions play a role. Although many
physicians still use the term rhonchus, some prefer to refer to the characteristic musical sounds simply as high-pitched or
low-pitched wheezes.
Nonmusical Sounds
Crackles
Crackles are short, explosive, nonmusical sounds heard on inspiration and sometimes during expiration. Two categories
of crackles have been described: fine crackles and coarse crackles.On auscultation, fine crackles are usually heard during
mid-to-late inspiration, are well perceived in dependent lung regions, and are not transmitted to the mouth. Uninfluenced
by cough, fine crackles are altered by gravity, changing or disappearing with changes in body position (e.g., bending
forward). Coarse crackles tend to appear early during inspiration and throughout expiration and have a popping quality.
They may be heard over any lung region, are usually transmitted to the mouth, can change or disappear with coughing,
and are not influenced by changes in body position. In sound analysis, crackles appear as rapidly dampened wave
deflections with a repetitive pattern (Figure 1G and 1H). As compared with coarse crackles, fine crackles have a shorter
duration (5 msec vs. 15 msec) and higher frequency (650 Hz vs. 350 Hz). The most likely mechanism for the generation
of fine crackles is the sudden inspiratory opening of small airways held closed by surface forces during the previous
expiration. Coarse crackles are probably produced by boluses of gas passing through airways as they open and close
intermittently. With the exception of the crackling sounds heard in moribund patients or in patients with abundant
secretions, crackles are probably not produced by secretions.
Evaluation for crackles is important because it can help with the differential diagnosis. Because fine crackles have a
distinctive sound that is similar to the sound heard when joined strips of Velcro are gently separated, they have been
called Velcro rales. Typically, fine crackles are prominent in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, appearing first in the basal
areas of the lungs and progressing to the upper zones with disease progression. However, fine crackles are not
pathognomonic of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis; they are also found in other interstitial diseases, such as asbestosis,
nonspecific interstitial pneumonitis, and interstitial fibrosis associated with connective-tissue disorders. Notably, fine
crackles tend to be minimal or even absent in sarcoidosis, probably because sarcoidosis primarily affects the central lung
zones not abutting the pleura. Among patients with similar levels of scarring on chest films, those with few crackles are
more likely to have sarcoidosis, whereas those who have many crackles are more likely to have idiopathic pulmonary
fibrosis. Advanced computerized acoustic analysis, which involves the use of a multichannel sound-detection device, has
made it possible to diagnose idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and congestive heart failure, in addition to other
cardiopulmonary disorders, with good sensitivity and specificity.
In idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and asbestosis, fine crackles can be discerned before radiologic abnormalities are
detected and are thus considered to be an early sign of pulmonary impairment. Although the presence of Velcro rales as
heard on auscultation has not been formally accepted as diagnostic of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, auscultation is
considered to be the only realistic means of detection early in the course of the disease. In asbestosis, the use of
computerized detection of crackles has appeared to be as accurate as CT in locating disease that is not radiologically
apparent. In a study of 386 workers exposed to asbestos, crackle detection by means of auscultation performed by a
trained technician correctly identified all the cases of asbestosis, suggesting that auscultation may have a role to play as a
noninvasive method of screening in these populations.
Coarse crackles are commonly heard in patients with obstructive lung diseases, including COPD, bronchiectasis, and
asthma, usually in association with wheezes. They are also often heard in patients with pneumonia and those with
congestive heart failure. In pneumonia, the characteristics of the crackles may vary markedly during the disease: the
coarse, midinspiratory crackles heard in the early phase give way to shorter, end-inspiratory crackles in the recovery
phase. Fine and coarse crackles may also coexist. Finally, although crackles can be heard in healthy persons, the
crackles tend to disappear after a few deep breaths. The presence of persistent crackles in both lungs in older persons
with dyspnea should prompt an investigation for interstitial lung disease.
Pleural Friction Rub
In healthy persons, the parietal and visceral pleura slide over each other silently. In persons with various lung diseases,
the visceral pleura can become rough enough that its passage over the parietal pleura produces crackling sounds heard
as a friction rub. In our experience, this sound is more prominent on auscultation of the basal and axillary regions than on
auscultation of the upper regions. One explanation for this difference is the fact that the basal regions lie on the steep
portion of the static pressurevolume curve, whereas the upper regions lie on the flat portion of the curve. Thus, for a
given change in transpulmonary pressure, the basal regions undergo greater expansion. Typically, the pleural friction rub
is biphasic, with the expiratory sequence of sounds mirroring the inspiratory sequence. Figure 1 shows individual
components of a pleural friction rub. The waveform is similar to that seen with crackles, except for its longer duration and
lower frequency. The pleural friction rub is probably produced by the sudden release of tangential energy from a l ung
surface that is temporarily prevented from sliding because of a frictional force between the two pleural layers. Typically,
pleural friction rubs are heard in inflammatory diseases (e.g., pleuritis) or malignant pleural diseases (e.g., mesothelioma).
Mixed Sound The Squawk
Also called short wheeze or squeak, the squawk is a mixed sound, containing musical and nonmusical
components. Figure 1J shows the sound analysis for a recorded squawk in a patient with hypersensitivity pneumonitis.
The short wheeze appears as sinusoidal oscillations that are less than 200 msec in duration, with a fundamental
frequency between 200 and 300 Hz. The mechanism underlying the production of squawks is not entirely known, but
according to one theory, they are produced by the oscillation of peripheral airways (in deflated lung zones) whose walls
remain in apposition long enough to oscillate under the action of the inspiratory airflow. Squawks are typically heard from
the middle to the end of inspiration in patients with interstitial diseases, especially hypersensitivity pneumonitis. However,
they are not pathognomonic of this condition, having also been documented in diseases such as bronchiectasis and
pneumonia. In a patient with squawk and no evidence of interstitial disease, pneumonia should be suspected, because it
is the next most likely cause.
CONCLUSIONS
Lung auscultation remains an essential part of the physical examination. No other clinical procedure matches auscultation
for the provision of relevant clinical information about the respiratory system quickly, easily, and by nearly universally
available means. Moreover, auscultation requires minimal cooperation on the part of the patient, is cost-effective, and can
be repeated as often as necessary. The development of robust acoustic devices for use at the bedside as exemplified
by electronic stethoscopes paired with small convenient recorders, perhaps in the form of a smartphone with an app
may provide the long-awaited portable objective means to record, analyze, and store lung sounds just as any other clinical
information is measured and stored. This development will make sound tracking possible, further enhancing the
usefulness of auscultation. Finally, it must be kept in mind that auscultation is not a laboratory test but a component of the
physical examination whose usefulness depends on its proper correlation with the available clinical information.
Figure 1. Acoustics and Waveforms of Lungs Sounds.
The left column shows typical values for the frequency (hertz) of the various sounds. The middle and right
columns show amplitude-time plots in unexpanded and time-expanded modes, respectively (amplitude is
measured in arbitrary units, and time in seconds). The unexpanded plots contain screenshots of the
entire sound, with a vertical line showing where the time-expanded sections (200 msec) were obtained.
All tracings begin with inspiration. The unexpanded waveform of the tracheal sound (Panel A) has strong
inspiratory and expiratory components; the expanded waveform shows random fluctuations that are
characteristic of white noise (a heterogeneous mixture of sound waves extending over a wide range of
frequencies). The vertical, regular spikes correspond to heart sounds. The unexpanded waveform of a
normal (vesicular) breath (Panel B) has a strong inspiratory component relative to the expiratory
component; the expanded waveform is similar to that of a tracheal sound, with random variation in
amplitude. (A low-pass filter allows easy passing of frequencies below a prescribed frequency limit.) In
bronchial breathing (Panel C), the unexpanded waveform is characterized by similar amplitudes of the
inspiratory and expiratory components; the time-expanded waveform is like that seen with tracheal and
normal breath sounds. The unexpanded waveform of stridor (Panel D) has a strong inspiratory
component that appears as sinusoidal oscillations in the time-expanded tracing. (The sinusoid is a
waveform representing periodic oscillations of constant amplitude, as indicated by a sine function. The
fundamental frequency is the lowest frequency produced.) The unexpanded waveform of a wheeze
(Panel E) has a strong expiratory component, which appears as sinusoidal oscillations characteristic of
musical sounds in the time-expanded tracing. A rhonchus (Panel F) can be distinguished from a wheeze
by its lower frequency, evident in the lower number of oscillations per unit of time in the time-expanded
waveform. In the unexpanded waveform, fine crackles (Panel G) appear as spikes that correspond with
the rapidly dampened wave deflections seen in the time-expanded tracing. Coarse crackles (Panel H)
cannot be distinguished from fine crackles in the unexpanded waveform; however, their longer duration
is apparent in the time-expanded tracing. The pleural friction rub (Panel I) has an unexpanded waveform
characterized by a series of vertical spikes in a pattern that is undistinguishable from that produced by
crackles. The lower frequency of the pleural friction rub is apparent in the time-expanded tracing. The
short musical component of the squawk (Panel J) is seen in the unexpanded waveform as a large vertical
spike in the middle of the inspiratory component of the normal breath sound. However, the sinusoidal
oscillations typical of musical sounds are evident only in the time-expanded tracing. Numerous
accompanying crackles can be seen as small vertical spikes on both inspiration and expiration.