Reference — Respiratory
Breath Sounds Reference
Breath sounds are divided into normal sounds (vesicular, bronchovesicular, bronchial) heard in specific locations, and adventitious (abnormal) sounds that indicate underlying pathology. Accurate auscultation and documentation are core nursing skills.
Educational use only. Auscultation findings must be interpreted in the context of the full clinical picture and patient history. Always correlate with vital signs, SpO₂, and provider assessment. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Normal Breath Sounds
| Sound | Location | Characteristics | Abnormal If Heard At |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vesicular | Most peripheral lung fields | Soft, low-pitched; inspiration longer than expiration (3:1); no pause between I and E | N/A — this is the expected peripheral sound |
| Bronchovesicular | 1st and 2nd intercostal spaces anteriorly; between scapulae posteriorly | Medium pitch; inspiration = expiration (1:1); slight hollow quality | Peripheral fields — suggests consolidation |
| Bronchial (Tracheal) | Over the trachea and manubrium | Loud, high-pitched, harsh; expiration longer than inspiration (2:3); short pause between I and E | Peripheral lung fields = consolidation (classic pneumonia sign) |
Adventitious (Abnormal) Breath Sounds
Key Differentiation Points
- Stridor vs wheeze: Stridor is inspiratory and is heard with the naked ear — upper airway. Wheeze is expiratory (mostly) and requires a stethoscope — lower airway.
- Crackles vs rhonchi: Crackles do not clear with coughing (fluid/collapsed alveoli). Rhonchi often clear with coughing (secretions in large airways).
- Pleural friction rub vs crackles: Friction rub is heard in both inspiration and expiration. Crackles are predominantly inspiratory. Neither clears with coughing.
- Bronchial sounds peripherally: Bronchial breath sounds heard over peripheral lung fields indicate consolidation — normal lung tissue is replaced by fluid or inflammatory material that conducts sound better.
- Absent sounds: No breath sounds in a lung field suggests pneumothorax, large effusion, or complete atelectasis — requires immediate escalation.
NCLEX Pearls
- ›Stridor = upper airway obstruction emergency — assess immediately and notify provider.
- ›Bronchial breath sounds heard peripherally = consolidation (pneumonia classic finding).
- ›Fine crackles that do NOT clear with coughing = fluid in small airways (pulmonary edema, fibrosis).
- ›Coarse crackles that DO clear with coughing = secretions in large airways (pneumonia, bronchitis).
- ›Pleural friction rub: heard in inspiration AND expiration — differentiates it from crackles.
- ›Absent breath sounds: notify provider — consider pneumothorax, effusion, or ETT displacement.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with American Association for Respiratory Care (AARC) · GOLD (COPD) / ATS / CHEST. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
