Breath Sounds of Pleural Effusion
The typical breath sounds associated with pleural effusion are decreased or absent breath sounds over the affected area, accompanied by dullness to percussion. 1
Physical Examination Findings
- Decreased or absent breath sounds are the hallmark auscultatory finding in pleural effusion, with the degree of reduction proportional to the size of the effusion 1
- Percussion reveals dullness over the fluid-filled area 1
- Tactile fremitus is typically decreased or absent over the effusion 1
- Egophony (E to A change) and increased vocal resonance may be heard at the upper border of the effusion 1
- Contralateral tracheal deviation may occur with large effusions due to mediastinal shift 1
Variations Based on Effusion Type
Simple Parapneumonic Effusion
- May have preserved breath sounds if the effusion is small 1
- Often accompanied by crackles in the adjacent lung tissue due to associated pneumonia 1
Complicated Parapneumonic Effusion/Empyema
- Complete absence of breath sounds is common 1
- May hear bronchial breathing above the effusion level 1
- Pleural friction rub might be present at the edges of the effusion 1
Malignant Pleural Effusion
- Typically presents with progressive diminishment of breath sounds as the effusion accumulates 1
- Large effusions may cause compression of adjacent lung tissue, leading to bronchial breathing at the upper border of the effusion 1
Correlation with Imaging Findings
- The extent of decreased breath sounds generally correlates with the size of the effusion seen on imaging 1
- Moderate to large effusions (500-2,000 ml) typically produce clearly detectable auscultatory changes 1
- Small effusions (<500 ml) may have subtle or no auscultatory findings, requiring imaging for detection 1
- Loculated effusions may produce patchy areas of decreased breath sounds 1
Clinical Pitfalls and Caveats
- Breath sounds may be transmitted through fluid, especially in thin patients, leading to false-negative auscultatory findings 1
- Underlying lung consolidation can modify the auscultatory findings of pleural effusion 1
- Bilateral effusions with normal heart size should raise suspicion for malignancy rather than heart failure 1
- Absent breath sounds with hyperresonance suggests pneumothorax, not pleural effusion 1
- Auscultation alone is insufficient for diagnosis - always confirm with imaging (chest radiograph, ultrasound, or CT) 1
- Ultrasound is more sensitive than auscultation for detecting small pleural effusions 1
Pathophysiological Basis
- The fluid in the pleural space creates a barrier to sound transmission from the lung to the chest wall 1
- The decreased lung volume due to compression by the effusion contributes to reduced breath sounds 1
- The pathogenesis of dyspnea in pleural effusion involves decreased chest wall compliance, mediastinal shift, decreased ipsilateral lung volume, and reflex stimulation from the lungs and chest wall 1