Assessing patients effectively: Here's how to do the basic... : Nursing2026 (original) (raw)

Here's how to do the basic four techniques

WHEN YOU PERFORM a physical assessment, you'll use four techniques: inspection, palpation, percussion, and auscultation. Use them in sequence—unless you're performing an abdominal assessment. Palpation and percussion can alter bowel sounds, so you'd inspect, auscultate, percuss, then palpate an abdomen.

1. Inspection

Inspect each body system using vision, smell, and hearing to assess normal conditions and deviations. Assess for color, size, location, movement, texture, symmetry, odors, and sounds as you assess each body system.

2. Palpation

Palpation requires you to touch the patient with different parts of your hands, using varying degrees of pressure. Because your hands are your tools, keep your fingernails short and your hands warm. Wear gloves when palpating mucous membranes or areas in contact with body fluids. Palpate tender areas last.

Types of palpation

Light palpation

FU1-5

Figure

Deep palpation

FU2-5

Figure

3. Percussion

Percussion involves tapping your fingers or hands quickly and sharply against parts of the patient's body to help you locate organ borders, identify organ shape and position, and determine if an organ is solid or filled with fluid or gas.

Types of percussion

Direct percussion

This technique reveals tenderness; it's commonly used to assess an adult's sinuses.

FU3-5

Figure

Indirect percussion

This technique elicits sounds that give clues to the makeup of the underlying tissue. Here's how to do it:

FU4-5

Figure

4. Auscultation

Auscultation involves listening for various lung, heart, and bowel sounds with a stethoscope.

Getting ready

How to auscultate

Source: Health Assessment made Incredibly Visual!, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2007.

© 2006 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.