What happens after a lung biopsy?
Olivia Hensley
Updated on March 19, 2026
You may be sore where the doctor made the cut (incision) in your skin and put in the biopsy needle. You may feel some pain in your lung when you take a deep breath. These symptoms usually get better in a few days. If you cough up mucus, there may be streaks of blood in the mucus for the first week after the procedure.
What percentage of lung biopsies are malignant?
About 40 percent of pulmonary nodules turn out to be cancerous. Half of all patients treated for a cancerous pulmonary nodule live at least five years past the diagnosis. But if the nodule is one centimeter across or smaller, survival after five years rises to 80 percent.Is a lung biopsy a serious procedure?
An open or thoracoscopic lung biopsy is a surgical procedure that is performed under general anesthesia. As with any surgical procedure, complications may occur. Some possible complications may include, but are not limited to, the following: Blood loss or clots.What are the side effects after a lung biopsy?
What are risks of a lung biopsy?
- Blood loss or blood clots.
- Pain or discomfort.
- Infection.
- Pneumonia.
- Problems from general anesthesia.
- Air in the space between the lung and the inner chest wall (pneumothorax)
- Fluid in the space between the lung and the inner chest wall (pleural effusion)