"Clear to auscultation" is a term used in medical examinations to describe normal breath sounds in the lungs. When a healthcare provider listens to the lungs with a stethoscope and hears no abnormal sounds like wheezing, crackles, or rhonchi, they report the findings as "clear." This indicates that there are no signs of respiratory distress or pathology, suggesting healthy lung function.
It means there are no abnormal sounds heard in your lungs.
Auscultation
The prefix of auscultation is "auscult-". The suffix of auscultation is "-ation".
In the word auscultation, there is a minor accent on the first syllable (aus) and a major accent on the third syllable (ta).
This is called auscultation, and is used most often to listen for heart and lung sounds. You can also ausculate the abdomen to listen for stomach and bowel sounds.
Auscultation is one way to determine a patients health.
"Pulmonary auscultation" is a fancy way of saying "listening to the lungs with a stethoscope."
Henry Marshall Hughes has written: 'A clinical introduction to the practice of auscultation, and other modes of physical diagnosis' -- subject(s): Auscultation, Percussion, Chest, Diseases 'A clinical introduction to the practice of auscultation' -- subject(s): Auscultation
Cardiac auscultation is the medical term meaning listening to the heart.
Sow it out
It's two sentences, really. It needs a period, but of course, punctuation is not allowed in the questions, that is the format of the site.
The appropriate steps to take when examining a patient are inspection, auscultation, palpation and percussion.