Pregnancy SmartSiteTM

Skip Navigation Schedule An Appointment

Normal Pregnancy

Alcohol and pregnancy Managing your weight gain in pregnancy Steps to take before you get pregnant When you need to gain more weight during pregnancy Aches and pains during pregnancy Choosing the right practitioner Common symptoms during pregnancy Hyperemesis Gravidarum Morning sickness Pregnancy and travel Pregnancy and work Problems sleeping during pregnancy Skin and hair changes during pregnancy Teenage pregnancy Cribs and crib safety Eat right during pregnancy Preparing your other children Amniocentesis Chorionic villus sampling Genetic counseling before pregnancy Glucose tolerance test-pregnancy Monitoring your baby before labor Nuchal translucency Prenatal care in your first trimester Prenatal care in your second trimester Prenatal care in your third trimester

Transillumination

Transillumination is the shining of a light through a body area or organ to check for abnormalities.

The room lights are dimmed or turned off so that the area of the body may be seen more easily. A bright light is then pointed at that area. Areas where this test is used include the:

  • Head
  • Chest of a premature or newborn infant
  • Breast of an adult female
  • Transillumination is also sometimes used to find blood vessels.

    In some locations in the stomach and intestine, the light can be seen through the skin and tissues at the time of and .

    No preparation is necessary for this test.

    There is no discomfort with this test.

    This test may be done along with other tests to diagnose:

  • in newborns or infants
  • Fluid-filled sac in the scrotum () or a tumor in the testicle
  • Breast lesions or cysts in women
  • In newborns, a bright halogen light may be used to transilluminate the chest cavity if there are signs of a collapsed lung or air around the heart. (Transillumination through the chest is only possible on small newborns.)

    In general, transillumination is not an accurate enough test to rely on. Further tests, such as an , , or , are needed to confirm the diagnosis.

    Normal findings depend on the area being evaluated and the normal tissue of that area.

    Areas filled with abnormal air or fluid light up when they should not. For example, in a darkened room, the head of a newborn with possible hydrocephalus will light up when this procedure is done.

    When done on the breast:

  • Internal areas will be dark to black if there is a lesion and bleeding has occurred (because blood does not transilluminate).
  • tumors tend to appear red.
  • Malignant tumors are brown to black.
  • There are no risks associated with this test.

    Ball JW, Dains JE, Flynn JA, Solomon BS, Stewart RW. Examination techniques and equipment. In: Ball JW, Dains JE, Flynn JA, Solomon BS, Stewart RW, eds. Seidel's Guide to Physical Examination. 10th ed. St Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2023:chap 3.

    Lissauer T, Hansen A. Physical examination of the newborn. In: Martin RJ, Fanaroff AA, Walsh MC, eds. Fanaroff and Martin's Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine: Diseases of the Fetus and Infant. 11th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2020:chap 28.

    Schedule An Appointment

    Contact Atlanta Obsetrics and Gynaecology at The Womens Center Millennium Hospital - 404-ATL-BABY

    GO

    Review Date: 8/20/2023

    Reviewed By: Jacob Berman, MD, MPH, Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA. Also reviewed by David C. Dugdale, MD, Medical Director, Brenda Conaway, Editorial Director, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team.