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đŸ« TB vs Pneumonia Made Simple: How X-Rays & Exam Signs Finally Make Sense

  • Writer: ToothOps
    ToothOps
  • Feb 18
  • 3 min read

If chest X-rays and lung exam terms like egophony or apical crackles feel confusing, you’re not alone.Most students try to memorize them — when what you really need is a mental model.


This post walks you through TB vs pneumonia the ToothOps way:calm, mechanism-first, and confidence-building.



1ïžâƒŁ Start With One Question (This Solves 80%)


What is happening to the lung tissue?

đŸ« Pneumonia → the lung is filled🩠 Tuberculosis (TB) → the lung is being destroyed


🧠 Analogy Box

  • Pneumonia = a sponge soaked with water

  • TB = wood slowly eaten by termites


Everything you see on X-ray and physical exam flows from this difference.



2ïžâƒŁ Chest X-Ray: What You’re Actually Looking For


đŸ« Pneumonia on X-Ray

Mechanism Acute inflammation fills alveoli with fluid, pus, and immune cells.


What you see

  • Consolidation (white, solid-looking lung)

  • Often limited to one lobe

  • Air bronchograms (black branching airways inside white lung)

  • Changes appear quickly (days)

  • Improves with antibiotics


🧠 Why air bronchograms appearAlveoli are fluid-filled (white), but bronchi still contain air (black).That contrast is classic for pneumonia.



🩠 TB on X-Ray

MechanismChronic immune response forms granulomas → tissue breakdown → cavities.


What you see

  • Upper-lobe disease

  • Cavitary lesions (holes)

  • Patchy, irregular opacities

  • Fibrosis or volume loss over time

  • Changes develop slowly (weeks–months)


🧠 Why upper lobes?TB thrives in high-oxygen environments, which the upper lobes provide.



📊 One-Look X-Ray Comparison

Feature

Pneumonia

TB

Core process

Alveoli filled

Tissue destroyed

Key word

Consolidation

Cavitation

Location

Any lobe

Upper lobes

Speed

Fast

Slow

Reversibility

Yes

Often scars



3ïžâƒŁ Physical Exam: What Your Hands & Ears Are Detecting


🔊 Crackles (Rales)

What crackles meanAir popping open fluid-filled airways.


  • Pneumonia:

    • Localized crackles

    • Appear early

    • Loud over affected lobe


  • TB:

    • Often apical crackles

    • Subtle or absent early

    • Appear late


🧠 Fluid makes noise. Holes don’t.



đŸ—Łïž Egophony (The “EEE → AAA” Sign)

What it isPatient says “EEE,” examiner hears “AAA.”


Why it happensSolid tissue transmits sound better than air.

  • Pneumonia:✅ Egophony present (alveoli are solid with fluid)

  • TB:❌ Usually absent (cavities disrupt sound)


💡 Pro Tip Egophony = consolidation → think pneumonia.


đŸ„ Percussion (Chest Tapping)

What you’re testingHow much air is underneath.

Sound

Meaning

Resonant

Air

Dull

Fluid or solid

  • Pneumonia:

    • Dull to percussion (fluid replaces air)


  • TB:

    • Often normal early

    • May become dull later with fibrosis

    • Mixed sounds near cavities


🧠 Early dullness strongly favors pneumonia.



4ïžâƒŁ Chest Pain: Pleuritic vs Non-Pleuritic

đŸ”Ș Pleuritic Chest Pain

Sharp pain, worse with breathing or coughing.


  • Pneumonia:✅ CommonAcute inflammation irritates the pleura

  • TB:❌ Usually absent earlyAppears only if pleura involved late


🧠 Acute inflammation hurts. Chronic destruction is quieter.



5ïžâƒŁ Put It All Together (This Is the Framework)


đŸ« Pneumonia

  • Fluid-filled lung

  • Loud exam findings

  • Obvious symptoms

  • Fast timeline

  • Reversible


🩠 TB

  • Destroyed lung

  • Quiet early exam

  • Chronic, vague symptoms

  • Slow timeline

  • Often leaves scars


🧠 Final One-Look Summary

Feature

Pneumonia

TB

X-ray

White consolidation

Upper-lobe cavities

Crackles

Loud, early

Apical, late

Egophony

Yes

No

Percussion

Dull early

Often normal early

Chest pain

Pleuritic

Mild or absent

Timeline

Days–weeks

Weeks–months


đŸŒ± Confidence Takeaway

You don’t need to memorize lung signs.


Just ask:

Is the lung filled — or being destroyed?

Once you answer that, the X-ray and exam findings make sense naturally.



@ToothOps | Fuel Your Smile 😊

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Disclaimer: Content is for educational purposes only and not a substitute for medical or dental care.

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  • Content is for informational purposes only and is not medical or dental advice.

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