Sign-in, or Join our Auscultation-Essentials plan. Join

Stridor | Lessons with Audio and Video | #140

Stridor is caused by upper airway narrowing or obstruction. It is often heard without a stethoscope. It occurs in 10-20% of extubated patients. Stridor is a loud, high-pitched crowing breath sound heard during inspiration but may also occur throughout the respiratory cycle most notably as a patient worsens. In children, stridor may become louder in the supine position. Causes of stridor are pertussis, croup, epiglottis, aspirations.

Auscultation Sounds

auscultation sound from lesson
waveform

Patient Recording

patient heart or lung sound
Stridor

Patient Recording - Half Speed

patient heart or lung sound
Stridor

Position

Patient position
The patient's position should be sitting.

Listening Tips

Features:A loud, high-pitched wheezing sound heard during inspiration but may also occur throughout the respiratory cycle. Often heard without a stethoscope

Waveform (Phonocardiogram)

Authors and Sources

Authors and Reviewers


Sources

Return to Reference Guide Index Page
Stridor | Lessons with Audio and Video | #140
? v:8 | onAr:0 | onPs:0 | tLb:0 | tLbJs:0
isPageNeedsInvoke:False | isTc: False
isHome:False | uStat: False | db:0 | pu:False | jsNext:False | pv:1 | now: 11/7/2024 10:37:56 PM | n? True | i? True
pu:False | ads: True | iparam: 0 | firstPage? True | showD? False





An error has occurred. Please reload the page or visit our other website, Practical Clinical Skills. Reload 🗙