Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
Approach to examining a lump
INSPECTION – assess the following:
▪ Site
▪ Size (width, length and depth)
▪ Shape (e.g. spherical)
▪ Surface (irregular vs. smooth)
▪ Skin changes (including discolouration, ulceration and tethering)
▪ Scars (indicating previous surgery).
PALPATION
▪ Edge (well-defined vs. diffuse)
▪ Consistency (soft, firm, hard)
▪ Fluctuance (if two areas on the opposite end of a lump bulge when a third area is compressed). This is best elicited by placing thumb and index finger either side of lump and compressing it with the index finger of the other hand)
▪ Compressability (if the lump disappears and then reforms)
▪ Reducibility (a characteristic of hernia)
▪ Cough impulse (a key characteristic of hernia)
▪ Pulsatility (implies that the lump lies adjacent to an artery). If it is expansile (can be felt by placing a hand either side of the lump), this suggests the presence of an aneurysm
▪ Layer of origin (e.g. skin, fat, muscle, bone)
▪ Tethering
▪ Fixity (whether it is attached to a deeper structure. Fixity to muscle can be demonstrated by contracting the underlying muscle and seeing the effect this has on its mobility)
▪ Regional lymph nodes.
AUSCULTATION
▪ Bruits
▪ Bowel sounds.
OTHER
▪ Transillumination (transmission of light through the swelling suggests a fluid content).
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