Lab | Complete Solution Guide |
2025-2026 Update | Graded A+
This comprehensive guide provides all the verified questions and
answers for the Shadow Health Respiratory Concept Lab, organized by
key learning objectives.
Section 1: Normal Air Passage and Lung Anatomy
Question 1: Detail normal air passage when a patient breathes.
Correct Answer: Air rushes through nasal passages and trachea,
bronchi, and into lungs where it's absorbed by the alveoli.
Rationale: Understanding normal air passage is fundamental to
recognizing where airflow disruptions occur in respiratory conditions.
Question 2: What happens during auscultation?
Correct Answer: Healthcare professionals listen to breath sounds
through a stethoscope.
Rationale: Auscultation allows providers to assess normal and
abnormal breath sounds to identify potential respiratory conditions.
,Question 3: Lung Lobes - Identify the lobes of each lung.
Correct Answer:
● Right lung: 3 lobes (Vesicular Right Superior, Vesicular Right
Middle, Vesicular Right Inferior)
● Left lung: 2 lobes (Vesicular Left Superior, Vesicular Left Inferior)
Rationale: The right lung has three lobes due to the liver's position
pushing the right lung upward; the left lung has two lobes to
accommodate the heart's position.
Section 2: Normal Breath Sounds
Question 4: What are bronchial sounds and how are these sounds
detected?
Correct Answer: Harsh, high-pitched, and loud sounds that can be
heard above the manubrium (over the trachea).
Characteristics of Bronchial Sounds:
● Harsh quality
● High-pitched
● Loud intensity
● Location: Above manubrium, over trachea
Question 5: What are bronchovesicular sounds and how are these
sounds detected?
, Correct Answer: Medium in loudness and medium in pitch sounds that
can be heard over the main bronchi.
Characteristics of Bronchovesicular Sounds:
● Medium loudness
● Medium pitch
● Location: Over main bronchi
Question 6: What are vesicular sounds and how are these sounds
detected?
Correct Answer: The softest and lowest in pitch sounds that are heard
over the lower bronchi, bronchioles, and lobes.
Characteristics of Vesicular Sounds:
● Softest intensity
● Lowest pitch
● Location: Lower bronchi, bronchioles, and peripheral lung tissue
Question 7: Where are vesicular sounds normally heard?
Correct Answer: Peripheral lung tissue.
Rationale: Vesicular sounds are the normal breath sounds heard over
most of the lung fields, indicating healthy air movement through small
airways and alveoli.
Section 3: Normal Breath Sounds Summary