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Description G?n?rale du Produit - Rendoscopy rendoscopy.com | Sant? g?n?rale: Advice from Dermatologists dermatologycare.ca | ACFD - Dentisterie générale acfd.ca |
Rales, crackles or crepitations, are the clicking, rattling, or crackling noises heard on auscultation of (listening to) the lung with a stethoscope during inhalation. Crackles are caused by the "popping open" of small airways and alveoli collapsed by fluid, exudate, or lack of aeration during expiration. The word "rales" derives from the French word râle meaning "rattle". Crackles can be heard in patients with pneumonia, atelectasis, pulmonary fibrosis, acute bronchitis, or bronchiectasis. Pulmonary edema secondary to left-sided congestive heart failure can also cause rales. The terms rales and crepitations are both still in common use in the US but less common elsewhere.[1] Use of the term rales has been discouraged by the American Thoracic Society and American College of Chest Physicians since 1977,[2] by numerous authors since,[3] and this is enforced by the editorial policy of a number of major medical journals.[1]
[edit] The sound of cracklesCrackles are caused by explosive opening of small airways,[3] are discontinuous, [4] nonmusical and brief. Crackles are much more common during the inspiratory than the expiratory phase of breathing, but they may be heard during the expiratory phase. Crackles are often associated with inflammation or infection of the small bronchi, bronchioles, and alveoli. Crackles that don't clear after a cough may indicate pulmonary edema or fluid in the alveoli due to heart failure or Acute respiratory distress syndrome.
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