Pulmonology focuses on diagnosing and treating lung and airway conditions such as asthma, COPD, and pneumonia, as well as overall respiratory health.
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Lung abscess diagnosis starts when a serious lung infection does not behave like a simple chest infection. Persistent fever, cough, foul-smelling sputum, chest pain, weight loss, or night sweats may suggest a deeper problem inside the lung.
A lung abscess is a pus-filled cavity caused by infection and tissue damage. Because similar symptoms can appear in pneumonia, tuberculosis, lung cancer, empyema, or fungal infection, diagnosis should be made with careful medical evaluation and imaging.
Patients who want to understand how this cavity develops can visit the Lung Abscess Overview and Definition section.
At Liv Hospital, pulmonology specialists evaluate symptoms, aspiration risk, oral health, immune status, imaging results, and microbiology findings together.
The first step is a detailed medical history. The doctor asks when symptoms started, whether pneumonia treatment failed, and whether sputum has become foul-smelling, bloody, or thick.
The evaluation may include:
Aspiration is an important clue. It may occur when oral bacteria, food, saliva, or stomach contents enter the lungs, especially in people with swallowing problems, seizures, alcohol-related loss of consciousness, or reduced cough reflex.
Patients who want to review risk factors in more detail can visit the Lung Abscess Symptoms and Risk Factors section.
Chest imaging is central to diagnosis. A chest X-ray may show a cavity, fluid level, or pneumonia-like area that does not resolve as expected.
Chest CT gives more detailed information. It can show the abscess size, wall thickness, air-fluid level, surrounding lung infection, and possible airway obstruction. CT is also helpful when the doctor needs to separate lung abscess from cancer, tuberculosis, empyema, or necrotizing pneumonia.
Imaging may help evaluate:
At Liv Hospital, imaging results are interpreted with symptoms and risk history, not as a single isolated finding.
Testing can help identify the infection and guide treatment. Sputum may be collected when the patient can cough up a useful sample.
Microbiology evaluation may include:
Blood tests may show infection severity, inflammation level, anemia, dehydration, kidney function, or general health status before treatment planning.
Culture results are useful, but they may not always identify every bacteria involved. Lung abscesses are often linked with anaerobic bacteria from the mouth, so clinical judgment remains important.
For treatment planning after diagnosis, patients can continue to the Lung Abscess Treatment and Management section.
Bronchoscopy may be recommended when the diagnosis is unclear, when an airway blockage is suspected, or when the abscess does not improve with treatment.
During bronchoscopy, the doctor examines the airways with a thin camera. Samples can also be collected for microbiology or cytology when needed.
Bronchoscopy may help assess:
This step is not needed for every patient. It is selected when the result may change diagnosis or treatment.
A lung abscess can resemble other serious conditions. This is why doctors evaluate the full picture before finalizing the diagnosis.
Conditions that may need to be ruled out include:
Severity assessment also matters. The doctor checks oxygen level, breathing effort, fever pattern, immune status, nutrition, and whether complications such as pleural infection or sepsis may be present.
Patients who want to understand follow-up and recurrence prevention can visit the Lung Abscess Recovery and Prevention section.
Lung abscess evaluation should be timely, detailed, and coordinated. Liv Hospital supports patients with pulmonology expertise, advanced imaging, microbiology testing, oxygen assessment, bronchoscopy when needed, and multidisciplinary care planning.
For international patients, Liv Hospital can assist with appointment planning, communication support, diagnostic coordination, treatment review, second opinion evaluation, and follow-up guidance.
If fever, foul sputum, chest pain, persistent cough, or abnormal imaging is affecting your health, Liv Hospital Pulmonology Department can guide the next step.
A suspected lung abscess should be evaluated carefully because delayed diagnosis may increase complication risk.
Contact Liv Hospital to review your symptoms, imaging results, infection history, and personalized diagnostic plan with pulmonology specialists.
Liv Hospital Ulus
Prof. MD. Ferah Ece
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ulus
Spec. MD. Mehmet Aydoğan
Respirology
Liv Hospital Vadistanbul
Assoc. Prof. MD. Ömer Ayten
Respirology
Liv Hospital Vadistanbul
Prof. MD. Cengiz Özdemir
Respirology
Liv Hospital Vadistanbul
Prof. MD. Levent Dalar
Respirology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Assoc. Prof. MD. Akın Yıldızhan
Thoracic Surgery
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Asst. Prof. MD. Aysu Sinem Koç
Pulmonology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Asst. Prof. MD. Zeynep Atam Taşdemir
Pulmonology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Prof. MD. Adalet Demir
Thoracic Surgery
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Prof. MD. Adil Can Güngen
Respirology
Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Prof. MD. Cemal Asım Kutlu
Thoracic Surgery
Liv Hospital Topkapı
Op. MD. Semih Buluklu
Thoracic Surgery
Liv Hospital Topkapı
Spec. MD. Gudrat Badalov
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Prof. MD. Kudret Ekiz
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Spec. MD. Berna Botan Yıldırım
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Spec. MD. Burça Takar
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Spec. MD. Didem Katar
Respirology
Liv Hospital Ankara
Spec. MD. Mine Önal
Respirology
Liv Hospital Gaziantep
Prof. MD. İbrahim Can Kürkçüoğlu
Thoracic Surgery
Liv Hospital Gaziantep
Spec. MD. Yeliz Karakan
Pulmonology
Liv Hospital Gaziantep
Spec. MD. İsmail Doğan
Pulmonology
Liv Hospital Samsun
Spec. MD. Aziz Uluışık
Respirology
Liv Hospital Samsun
Spec. MD. Saliha Ercan Bütün
Pulmonology
Liv Bona Dea Hospital Bakü
Spec. MD. FİRUZ MEMMEDOV
Pulmonology
Liv Hospital Ulus + Liv Hospital Vadistanbul + Liv Hospital Bahçeşehir
Prof. MD. Erkan Çakır
Pediatric Respirology
Send us all your questions or requests, and our expert team will assist you.
Diagnosis may include medical history, physical examination, chest X-ray, chest CT, sputum culture, blood tests, oxygen assessment, and bronchoscopy in selected cases.
CT can show the abscess cavity, wall thickness, air-fluid level, surrounding infection, and possible airway blockage more clearly than a standard X-ray.
No. Sputum culture can help, but it may not identify every bacteria involved. Doctors interpret culture results with symptoms, imaging, and aspiration risk.
Bronchoscopy may be needed if airway obstruction, tumor, foreign body, bleeding, unusual infection, or poor treatment response is suspected.
You can contact Liv Hospital if fever continues, sputum smells foul, chest pain appears, breathing becomes difficult, or imaging shows a lung cavity.
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