Search
SectionsIndexSymptoms
  • Cardiovascular Disorders
  • Clinical Pharmacology
  • Critical Care Medicine
  • Dental Disorders
  • Dermatologic Disorders
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Endocrine and Metabolic Disorders
  • Eye Disorders
  • Gastrointestinal Disorders
  • Genitourinary Disorders
  • Geriatrics
  • Gynecology and Obstetrics
  • Hematology and Oncology
  • Hepatic and Biliary Disorders
  • Immunology; Allergic Disorders
  • Infectious Diseases
  • Injuries; Poisoning
  • Musculoskeletal and Connective Tissue Disorders
  • Neurologic Disorders
  • Nutritional Disorders
  • Pediatrics
  • Psychiatric Disorders
  • Pulmonary Disorders
  • Special Subjects
ABCDEFGHI
JKLMNOPQR
STUVWXYZ
  • Abdominal Pain, Acute
  • Abdominal pain, Chronic
  • Alopecia
  • Amenorrhea
  • Amnesia
  • Anosmia
  • Bleeding, Excessive
  • Breast Lumps
  • Chest Pain
  • Constipation in Adults
  • Constipation in Children
  • Cough in Adults
  • Cough in Children
  • Crying
  • Diarrhea in Adults
  • Diarrhea in Children
  • Diplopia
  • Dizziness
  • Dry Mouth
  • Dysmenorrhea
  • Dyspepsia
  • Dysphagia
  • Dyspnea
  • Dysuria
  • Earache
  • Ear Discharge
  • Edema
  • Edema During Late Pregnancy
  • Epistaxis
  • Erectile dysfunction
  • Eyelid Swelling
  • Eye Pain
  • Fever
  • Fever, Acute, in Adults
  • Fever, Chronic (FUO)
  • Fever in Infants and Children
  • Floaters
  • Gas
  • Gastrointestinal Bleeding
  • Halitosis
  • Headache
  • Hearing Loss
  • Hearing Loss: Sudden Deafness
  • Hematospermia
  • Hematuria
  • Hemoptysis
  • Hiccups
  • Hirsutism
  • Insomnia and Excessive Daytime Sleepiness
  • Itching
  • Itching, Anal
  • Jaundice in Adults
  • Jaundice in Neonates
  • Joint Pain, Monarticular
  • Joint Pain, Polyarticular
  • Knee pain
  • Lump in Throat
  • Nasal Congestion and Rhinorrhea
  • Nausea and Vomiting During Early pPregnancy
  • Nausea and Vomiting in Adults
  • Nausea and Vomiting in Infants and Children
  • Neck and Back Pain
  • Neck Mass
  • Nipple Discharge
  • Orthostatis Hypotension
  • Pain
  • Pain, Chronic
  • Palpitations
  • Pelvic Pain
  • Pelvic Pain During Early Pregnancy
  • Polyuria
  • Priapism
  • Red Eye
  • Scrotal Pain
  • Sore Throat
  • Stomatitis
  • Stridor
  • Syncope
  • Tearing
  • Tinnitus
  • Toothache
  • Tremor
  • Urinary Frequency
  • Urinary Incontinence in Adults
  • Urinary Incontinence in Children
  • Urinary Retention
  • Urticaria
  • Vaginal Bleeding
  • Vaginal Bleeding During Early Pregnancy
  • Vaginal Bleeding During Late Pregnancy
  • Vaginal Itching and Discharge
  • Vision, Blurred
  • Vision Loss, Acute
  • Weakness, Generalized
  • Wheezing
In This Topic
Pulmonary Disorders
Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders
Dyspnea
Pathophysiology
Etiology
Evaluation
History
Physical examination
Red flags
Interpretation of findings
Testing
Treatment
Key Points
Back to Top
Resources
  • About The Merck Manual
  • Ready Reference Guides
  • Trade Names of Some Commonly Used Drugs
  • Normal Laboratory Values
  • Clinical Calculators
  • Multimedia
  • Selected Links
Manuals available online
'/home/index.html' + bookPageLink
 
'/professional/index.html'
These and other Manuals available
in print, online, and as mobile applications.

See more at MerckManuals.com
Sections in Health Care Professionals
  • Cardiovascular Disorders
  • Clinical Pharmacology
  • Critical Care Medicine
  • Dental Disorders
  • Dermatologic Disorders
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Endocrine and Metabolic Disorders
  • Eye Disorders
  • Gastrointestinal Disorders
  • Genitourinary Disorders
  • Geriatrics
  • Gynecology and Obstetrics
  • Hematology and Oncology
  • Hepatic and Biliary Disorders
  • Immunology; Allergic Disorders
  • Infectious Diseases
  • Injuries; Poisoning
  • Musculoskeletal and Connective Tissue Disorders
  • Neurologic Disorders
  • Nutritional Disorders
  • Pediatrics
  • Psychiatric Disorders
  • Pulmonary Disorders
  • Special Subjects
Chapters in Pulmonary Disorders
  • Approach to the Pulmonary Patient
  • Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders
  • Tests of Pulmonary Function (PFT)
  • Diagnostic Pulmonary Procedures
  • Pulmonary Rehabilitation
  • Asthma and Related Disorders
  • Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Related Disorders
  • Pulmonary Embolism
  • Acute Bronchitis
  • Pneumonia
  • Lung Abscess
  • Bronchiectasis
  • Interstitial Lung Diseases
  • Sarcoidosis
  • Environmental Pulmonary Diseases
  • Pulmonary Hypertension
  • Diffuse Alveolar Hemorrhage and Pulmonary-Renal Syndrome
  • Mediastinal and Pleural Disorders
  • Sleep Apnea
  • Tumors of the Lungs
Topics in Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders
  • Cough
  • Dyspnea
  • Hemoptysis
  • Hyperventilation Syndrome
  • Solitary Pulmonary Nodule
  • Stridor
  • Vocal Cord Dysfunction
  • Wheezing
 
  • Merck Manual
  • >
  • Health Care Professionals
  • >
  • Pulmonary Disorders
  • >
  • Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders
  • 4
 
Dyspnea

Share This

Dyspnea: A Merck Manual of Patient Symptoms podcast

Dyspnea is unpleasant or uncomfortable breathing. It is experienced and described differently by patients depending on the cause.

Pathophysiology

Although dyspnea is a relatively common problem, the pathophysiology of the uncomfortable sensation of breathing is poorly understood. Unlike those for other types of noxious stimuli, there are no specialized dyspnea receptors, although recent MRI studies have identified a few specific areas in the midbrain that may mediate perception of dyspnea.

The experience of dyspnea likely results from a complex interaction between chemoreceptor stimulation, mechanical abnormalities in breathing, and the perception of those abnormalities by the CNS. Some authors have described the imbalance between neurologic stimulation and mechanical changes in the lungs and chest wall as neuromechanical uncoupling.

Etiology

Dyspnea has many pulmonary, cardiac, and other causes, which vary by acuity of onset (see Table 2: Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders: Some Causes of Acute* DyspneaTables, Table 3: Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders: Some Causes of Subacute* DyspneaTables, and Table 4: Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders: Some Causes of Chronic* DyspneaTables).

The most common causes include

  • Asthma
  • Pneumonia
  • COPD
  • Myocardial ischemia
  • Deconditioning

The most common cause of dyspnea in patients with chronic pulmonary or cardiac disorders is

  • Exacerbation of their disease

However, such patients may also acutely develop another condition (eg, a patient with long-standing asthma may have an MI, a patient with chronic heart failure may develop pneumonia).

Table 2

PrintOpen table in new window Open table in new window
Some Causes of Acute* Dyspnea

Cause

Suggestive Findings

Diagnostic Approach†

Pulmonary causes

Pneumothorax

Abrupt onset of sharp chest pain, tachypnea, diminished breath sounds, and hyperresonance to percussion

May follow injury or occur spontaneously (especially in tall, thin patients and in patients with COPD)

Chest x-ray

Pulmonary embolism

Abrupt onset of sharp chest pain, tachypnea, and tachycardia

Often risk factors for pulmonary embolism (eg, cancer, immobilization, DVT, pregnancy, use of oral contraceptives or other estrogen-containing drugs, recent surgery or hospitalization, family history)

CT angiography or V/Q scanning

Doppler or duplex studies of extremities showing findings of DVT

Asthma, bronchospasm, or reactive airway disease

Wheezing and poor air exchange that arise spontaneously or after exposure to specific stimuli (eg, allergen, URI, cold, exercise)

Possibly pulsus paradoxus

Often a preexisting history of reactive airway disease

Clinical evaluation

Sometimes pulmonary function testing or bedside peak flow measurement

Foreign body inhalation

Sudden onset of cough or stridor in a patient (typically an infant or young child) without URI or constitutional symptoms

Inspiratory and expiratory chest x-rays

Sometimes bronchoscopy

Toxin-induced airway damage (eg, due to inhalation of chlorine or hydrogen sulfide)

Sudden onset after occupational exposure or inappropriate use of cleaning agents

Inhalation usually obvious by history

Chest x-ray

Sometimes ABGs and observation to determine severity

Cardiac causes

Acute myocardial ischemia or infarction

Substernal chest pressure or pain that may or may not radiate to the arm or jaw, particularly in patients with risk factors for CAD

ECG

Cardiac enzyme testing

Papillary muscle dysfunction or rupture

Sudden onset of chest pain, new or loud holosystolic murmur, and signs of heart failure, particularly in patients with recent MI

Auscultation

Echocardiography

Heart failure

Crackles, S3 gallop, and signs of central or peripheral volume overload (eg, elevated neck veins, peripheral edema)

Dyspnea while lying flat (orthopnea) or appearing 1–2 h after falling asleep (paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea)

Auscultation

Chest x-ray

BNP measurement

Echocardiography

Other causes

Diaphragmatic paralysis

Sudden onset after trauma affecting the phrenic nerve

Frequent orthopnea

Chest x-ray

Fluoroscopic sniff test

Anxiety disorder causing hyperventilation

Situational dyspnea often accompanied by psychomotor agitation and paresthesias in the fingers or around the mouth

Normal examination findings and pulse oximetry measurements

Clinical evaluation

Diagnosis of exclusion

*Acute dyspnea occurs within minutes of triggering event.

†Most patients should have pulse oximetry and, unless symptoms are clearly a mild exacerbation of known chronic disease, chest x-ray.

BNP = brain (B-type) natriuretic peptide; DVT = deep venous thrombosis; S3 = 3rd heart sound; V/Q = ventilation/perfusion.

Some Causes of Acute* Dyspnea

Cause

Suggestive Findings

Diagnostic Approach†

Pulmonary causes

Pneumothorax

Abrupt onset of sharp chest pain, tachypnea, diminished breath sounds, and hyperresonance to percussion

May follow injury or occur spontaneously (especially in tall, thin patients and in patients with COPD)

Chest x-ray

Pulmonary embolism

Abrupt onset of sharp chest pain, tachypnea, and tachycardia

Often risk factors for pulmonary embolism (eg, cancer, immobilization, DVT, pregnancy, use of oral contraceptives or other estrogen-containing drugs, recent surgery or hospitalization, family history)

CT angiography or V/Q scanning

Doppler or duplex studies of extremities showing findings of DVT

Asthma, bronchospasm, or reactive airway disease

Wheezing and poor air exchange that arise spontaneously or after exposure to specific stimuli (eg, allergen, URI, cold, exercise)

Possibly pulsus paradoxus

Often a preexisting history of reactive airway disease

Clinical evaluation

Sometimes pulmonary function testing or bedside peak flow measurement

Foreign body inhalation

Sudden onset of cough or stridor in a patient (typically an infant or young child) without URI or constitutional symptoms

Inspiratory and expiratory chest x-rays

Sometimes bronchoscopy

Toxin-induced airway damage (eg, due to inhalation of chlorine or hydrogen sulfide)

Sudden onset after occupational exposure or inappropriate use of cleaning agents

Inhalation usually obvious by history

Chest x-ray

Sometimes ABGs and observation to determine severity

Cardiac causes

Acute myocardial ischemia or infarction

Substernal chest pressure or pain that may or may not radiate to the arm or jaw, particularly in patients with risk factors for CAD

ECG

Cardiac enzyme testing

Papillary muscle dysfunction or rupture

Sudden onset of chest pain, new or loud holosystolic murmur, and signs of heart failure, particularly in patients with recent MI

Auscultation

Echocardiography

Heart failure

Crackles, S3 gallop, and signs of central or peripheral volume overload (eg, elevated neck veins, peripheral edema)

Dyspnea while lying flat (orthopnea) or appearing 1–2 h after falling asleep (paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea)

Auscultation

Chest x-ray

BNP measurement

Echocardiography

Other causes

Diaphragmatic paralysis

Sudden onset after trauma affecting the phrenic nerve

Frequent orthopnea

Chest x-ray

Fluoroscopic sniff test

Anxiety disorder causing hyperventilation

Situational dyspnea often accompanied by psychomotor agitation and paresthesias in the fingers or around the mouth

Normal examination findings and pulse oximetry measurements

Clinical evaluation

Diagnosis of exclusion

*Acute dyspnea occurs within minutes of triggering event.

†Most patients should have pulse oximetry and, unless symptoms are clearly a mild exacerbation of known chronic disease, chest x-ray.

BNP = brain (B-type) natriuretic peptide; DVT = deep venous thrombosis; S3 = 3rd heart sound; V/Q = ventilation/perfusion.

Table 3

PrintOpen table in new window Open table in new window
Some Causes of Subacute* Dyspnea

Cause

Suggestive Findings

Diagnostic Approach†

Pulmonary causes

Pneumonia

Fever, productive cough, dyspnea, sometimes pleuritic chest pain

Focal lung findings, including crackles, decreased breath sounds, and egophony

Chest x-ray

Sometimes blood and sputum cultures

WBC count

COPD exacerbation

Cough, productive or nonproductive

Poor air movement

Accessory muscle use or pursed lip breathing

Clinical evaluation

Sometimes chest x-ray and ABGs

Cardiac causes

Angina or CAD

Substernal chest pressure with or without radiation to the arm or jaw, often provoked by physical exertion, particularly in patients with risk factors for CAD

ECG

Cardiac stress testing

Cardiac catheterization

Pericardial effusion or tamponade

Muffled heart sounds or enlarged cardiac silhouette in patients with risk factors for pericardial effusion (eg, cancer, pericarditis, SLE)

Possibly pulsus paradoxus

Echocardiography

*Subacute dyspnea occurs within hours or days.

†Most patients should have pulse oximetry and, unless symptoms are clearly a mild exacerbation of known chronic disease, chest x-ray.

CAD = coronary artery disease.

Table 4

PrintOpen table in new window Open table in new window
Some Causes of Chronic* Dyspnea

Cause

Suggestive Findings

Diagnostic Approach†

Pulmonary causes

Obstructive lung disease

Extensive smoking history, barrel chest, and poor air entry and exit

Chest x-ray

Pulmonary function testing (at initial evaluation)

Restrictive lung disease

Progressive dyspnea in patients with known occupational exposure or neurologic condition

Chest x-ray

Pulmonary function testing (at initial evaluation)

Interstitial lung disease

Fine crackles, frequently accompanied by dry cough

High-resolution chest CT

Pleural effusion

Pleuritic chest pain, lung field that is dull to percussion and has diminished breath sounds

Sometimes history of cancer, heart failure, RA, SLE, or acute pneumonia

Chest x-ray

Often chest CT and thoracentesis

Cardiac causes

Heart failure

Crackles, S3 gallop, and signs of central or peripheral volume overload (eg, elevated neck veins, peripheral edema)

Orthopnea or paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea

Auscultation

Chest x-ray

Echocardiography

Stable angina or CAD

Substernal chest pressure with or without radiation to the arm or jaw, often provoked by physical exertion, particularly in patients with risk factors for CAD

ECG

Cardiac stress testing

Sometimes cardiac catheterization

Other causes

Anemia

Dyspnea on exertion progressing to dyspnea at res

Normal lung examination and pulse oximetry measurement

Sometimes systolic heart murmur due to increased flow

CBC

Physical deconditioning

Dyspnea only on exertion in patients with sedentary lifestyle

Clinical evaluation

*Chronic dyspnea occurs within hours to years.

†Most patients should have pulse oximetry and, unless symptoms are clearly a mild exacerbation of known chronic disease, chest x-ray.

CAD = coronary artery disease; S3 = 3rd heart sound.

Some Causes of Chronic* Dyspnea

Cause

Suggestive Findings

Diagnostic Approach†

Pulmonary causes

Obstructive lung disease

Extensive smoking history, barrel chest, and poor air entry and exit

Chest x-ray

Pulmonary function testing (at initial evaluation)

Restrictive lung disease

Progressive dyspnea in patients with known occupational exposure or neurologic condition

Chest x-ray

Pulmonary function testing (at initial evaluation)

Interstitial lung disease

Fine crackles, frequently accompanied by dry cough

High-resolution chest CT

Pleural effusion

Pleuritic chest pain, lung field that is dull to percussion and has diminished breath sounds

Sometimes history of cancer, heart failure, RA, SLE, or acute pneumonia

Chest x-ray

Often chest CT and thoracentesis

Cardiac causes

Heart failure

Crackles, S3 gallop, and signs of central or peripheral volume overload (eg, elevated neck veins, peripheral edema)

Orthopnea or paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea

Auscultation

Chest x-ray

Echocardiography

Stable angina or CAD

Substernal chest pressure with or without radiation to the arm or jaw, often provoked by physical exertion, particularly in patients with risk factors for CAD

ECG

Cardiac stress testing

Sometimes cardiac catheterization

Other causes

Anemia

Dyspnea on exertion progressing to dyspnea at res

Normal lung examination and pulse oximetry measurement

Sometimes systolic heart murmur due to increased flow

CBC

Physical deconditioning

Dyspnea only on exertion in patients with sedentary lifestyle

Clinical evaluation

*Chronic dyspnea occurs within hours to years.

†Most patients should have pulse oximetry and, unless symptoms are clearly a mild exacerbation of known chronic disease, chest x-ray.

CAD = coronary artery disease; S3 = 3rd heart sound.

Evaluation

History: History of present illness should cover the duration, temporal onset (eg, abrupt, insidious), and provoking or exacerbating factors (eg, allergen exposure, cold, exertion, supine position). Severity can be determined by assessing the activity level required to cause dyspnea (ie, dyspnea at rest is more severe than dyspnea only with climbing stairs). For patients with baseline dyspnea, the physician should note how much dyspnea has changed from the patient's usual state.

Review of systems should seek symptoms of possible causes, including chest pain or pressure (pulmonary embolism [PE], myocardial ischemia, pneumonia); dependent edema, orthopnea, and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea (heart failure); fever, chills, cough, and sputum production (pneumonia); black, tarry stools or heavy menses (occult bleeding possibly causing anemia); and weight loss or night sweats (cancer or chronic lung infection).

Past medical history should cover disorders known to cause dyspnea, including asthma, COPD, and heart disease, as well as risk factors for the different etiologies:

  • Smoking history—for cancer, COPD, and heart disease
  • Family history, hypertension, and high cholesterol levels—for coronary artery disease
  • Recent immobilization or surgery, recent long-distance travel, cancer or risk factors for or signs of occult cancer, prior or family history of clotting, pregnancy, oral contraceptive use, calf pain, leg swelling, and known deep venous thrombosis—for PE

Occupational exposures (eg, gases, smoke, asbestos) should be investigated.

Physical examination: Vital signs are reviewed for fever, tachycardia, and tachypnea.

Examination focuses on the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems.

A full lung examination is done, particularly including adequacy of air entry and exit, symmetry of breath sounds, and presence of crackles, rhonchi, stridor, and wheezing. Signs of consolidation (eg, egophony, dullness to percussion) should be sought. The cervical, supraclavicular, and inguinal areas should be inspected and palpated for lymphadenopathy.

Neck veins should be inspected for distention, and the legs and presacral area should be palpated for pitting edema (both suggesting heart failure).

Heart sounds should be auscultated with notation of any extra heart sounds, muffled heart sounds, or murmur. Testing for pulsus paradoxus (a > 12-mm Hg drop of systolic BP during inspiration) can be done by inflating a BP cuff to 20 mm Hg above the systolic pressure and then slowly deflating until the first Korotkoff sound is heard only during expiration. As the cuff is further deflated, the point at which the first Korotkoff sound is audible during both inspiration and expiration is recorded. If the difference between the first and second measurement is > 12 mm Hg, then pulsus paradoxus is present.

Conjunctiva should be examined for pallor. Rectal examination and stool guaiac testing should be done.

Red flags: The following findings are of particular concern:

  • Dyspnea at rest during examination
  • Decreased level of consciousness or agitation or confusion
  • Accessory muscle use and poor air excursion
  • Chest pain
  • Crackles
  • Weight loss
  • Night sweats
  • Palpitations

Interpretation of findings: The history and physical examination often suggest a cause and guide further testing (see Table 2: Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders: Some Causes of Acute* DyspneaTables, Table 3: Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders: Some Causes of Subacute* DyspneaTables, and Table 4: Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders: Some Causes of Chronic* DyspneaTables). Several findings are of note. Wheezing (see Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders: Wheezing) suggests asthma or COPD. Stridor (see Symptoms of Pulmonary Disorders: Stridor) suggests extrathoracic airway obstruction (eg, foreign body, epiglottitis, vocal cord dysfunction). Crackles suggest left heart failure, interstitial lung disease, or, if accompanied by signs of consolidation, pneumonia.

However, the symptoms and signs of life-threatening conditions such as myocardial ischemia and PE can be nonspecific. Furthermore, the severity of symptoms is not always proportional to the severity of the cause (eg, PE in a fit, healthy person may cause only mild dyspnea). Thus, a high degree of suspicion for these common conditions is prudent. It is often appropriate to rule out these conditions before attributing dyspnea to a less serious etiology.

A clinical prediction rule (see Symptoms of Cardiovascular Disorders: Clinical Prediction Rule for Diagnosing Pulmonary EmbolismTables) can help estimate the risk of PE. Note that a normal O2 saturation does not exclude PE.

Hyperventilation syndrome is a diagnosis of exclusion. Because hypoxia may cause tachypnea and agitation, it is unwise to assume every rapidly breathing, anxious young person merely has hyperventilation syndrome.

Testing: Pulse oximetry should be done in all patients, and a chest x-ray should be done as well unless symptoms are clearly caused by a mild or moderate exacerbation of a known condition. For example, patients with asthma or heart failure do not require an x-ray for each flare-up, unless clinical findings suggest another cause or an unusually severe attack. Most adults should have an ECG to detect myocardial ischemia (and serum cardiac marker testing if suspicion is high) unless myocardial ischemia can be excluded clinically.

In patients with severe or deteriorating respiratory status, ABGs should be measured to more precisely quantify hypoxemia, measure Paco2, diagnose any acid-base disorders stimulating hyperventilation, and calculate the alveolar-arterial gradient.

Clinical Calculator

Clinical Calculator

A-a O2 Gradient

Patients who have no clear diagnosis after chest x-ray and ECG and are at moderate or high risk of having PE (from the clinical prediction rule—see Symptoms of Cardiovascular Disorders: Clinical Prediction Rule for Diagnosing Pulmonary EmbolismTables) should undergo ventilation/perfusion scanning or CT angiography. Patients who are at low risk may have d-dimer testing (to detect the presence of clot); a normal d-dimer level effectively rules out PE in a low-risk patient.

Chronic dyspnea may warrant additional tests, such as CT, pulmonary function tests, echocardiography, and bronchoscopy.

Treatment

Treatment is correction of the underlying disorder.

Hypoxemia is treated with supplemental O2 as needed to maintain SaO2 > 88% or PaO2 > 55 mm Hg because levels above these thresholds provide adequate O2 delivery to tissues. Levels below these thresholds are on the steep portion of the O2–Hb dissociation curve, in which small declines in arterial O2 tension result in large declines in Hb saturation. O2 saturation should be maintained at > 93% if myocardial or cerebral ischemia is a concern.

MorphineSome Trade Names
DURAMORPH
MS CONTIN
MSIR
ROXANOL
Click for Drug Monograph
0.5 to 5 mg IV helps reduce anxiety and the discomfort of dyspnea in various conditions, including MI, PE, and the dyspnea that commonly accompanies terminal illness. However, opioids can be deleterious in patients with acute airflow limitation (eg, asthma, COPD) because they suppress the ventilatory drive and worsen respiratory acidemia.

Key Points

  • Pulse oximetry is a key component of the examination.
  • Low O2 saturation (< 90%) indicates a significant problem, but normal saturation does not rule one out.
  • Accessory muscle use, low O2 saturation, or decreased level of consciousness requires emergency evaluation and hospitalization.
  • Myocardial ischemia and PE are relatively common, but symptoms and signs can be nonspecific.
  • Exacerbation of known conditions (eg, asthma, COPD, heart failure) is common, but patients may also develop new problems.

Last full review/revision July 2012 by Noah Lechtzin, MD, MHS

Content last modified November 2012

Buy the Book

Mobile Versions

Back to Top

Previous: Cough

Next: Hemoptysis

Audio
Figures
Photographs
Sidebars
Tables
Videos

Copyright     © 2010-2013 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, N.J., U.S.A.    Privacy    Terms of Use