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VN 148 midterm

QuestionAnswer
DIAGNOSTIC SURGERY removal and study of tissue to make an accurate diagnosis
EXPLORATORY SURGERY usually requires opening a body cavity to diagnose and determine the extent of a disease process
CURATIVE SURGERY remove diseased tissue or to correct defects
ablation refers to removal of tissue
PALLIATIVE SURGERY relieves symptoms or improves function without correcting the basic problem
COSMETIC SURGERY corrects serious defects that affect appearance; often the pt wants to change a physical feature
variables affecting surgical outcomes age, nutritional status, fluid balance, medical diagnoses, drugs, smoking, alcohol
AGE older adults respond differently to drugs because of age-related changes in liver and kidney function and drug interactions
NUTRITIONAL STATUS MALNOURISHED - at risk for poor wound healing and infection; OBESE - generally in surgery longer & more likely to have postoperative resp and wound complications
FLUID BALANCE adequate fluids necessary to maintain blood vol & urine output. Excess body fluid can overload the heart. Electrolyte imbalances may predispose pt to dangerous cardiac dysrhythmias
MEDICAL DIAGNOSES BLEEDING DISORDERS, HEART DISEASE, CHRONIC RESP DISEASE, LIVER DISEASE, DIABETES MELLITUS
BLEEDING DISORDERS at risk for excessive bleeding and must be closely monitored
HEART DISEASE cardiac complications related to anesthesia/stress of surgery
CHRONIC RESPIRATORY DISEASE pulmonary complications due to anesthesia or hypoventilation
LIVER DISEASE impaired wound healing; may experience drug toxicity from the inability to metabolize drugs effectively
DIABETES MELLITUS heal more slowly and at greater risk for infection
DRUGS many drugs have the potential to interact with anesthetic agents. The effects of surgery or additional drugs may require dosage adjustments in drugs the pt has been taking routinely
SMOKING increases the risk of pulmonary complications because secretions are more copious and tenacious and ciliary activity is less effective.
ALCOHOL interacts with many drugs, may need a higher dose of anesthetic agent because of increased drug tolerance
HEALTH HISTORY ID DATA, HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS, PAST MED HISTORY, ALLERGIES
REVIEW OF SYSTEMS collect data abt each body system, noting any abnormal. Record disabilities or limitations. Doc problems that may be significant during surgical experience, such as vision/hearing loss, partial paralysis/joint stiffness, weakness or cognitive impairment.
FUNCTIONAL ASSESSMENT describe usual activity pattern, including occupation, roles & responsibilities. Determine the usual diet and fluid intake as well as the use of tobacco & alcohol. Note exercise & rest patterns. Ask abt sources of stress & support, usual ways of coping
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION ht & wt, VS, Skin, Thorax
SURGICAL TEAM surgeon, asst surgeon, rn who circulates, rn 1st asst, rn lpn or surgical tech, anesthesia care provider, other specialized tech personnel
STERILE MEMBERS surgeon, asst surgeon, rn 1st asst, scrub nurse: RN, LVN or Tech, surgical tech
NON STERILE MEMBERS circulating nurse: RN, CRNA, Anesthesiologist, other
ANESTHESIA- REGIONAL using local anesthetics that block the conduciton of nerve impulses in a specific area
ANESTHESIA- LOCAL may be administered topically, by local infiltration, and by nerve blocking techniques
ANESTHESIA- TOPICAL applied directly to the area to be anesthesized
ANESTHESIA- LOCAL INFILTRATION agent is injected into and under the skin around the area of treatment
ANESTHESIA- NERVE BLOCK injecting an anesthetic agent around a nerve to block the transmission of impulses
ANESTHESIA- NERVE BLOCK (IE) epidural and subarachnoid anesthesia
ANESTHESIA- preanesthetic agents antianxiety agents, sedative-hypnotics, antichol & opiod analgesics; red anxiety wo causing excessive drowsiness, induce perioperative amnesia & red amt of anesthesia req. Reduce risk of adverse effect such as salivation, bradycardia, couging & vomiting
ANESTHESIA- General acts on the CNS causing loss of consciousness, sensation, reflexes, pain perception and memory
ANESTHESIA- General -MALIGNANT HYPERTHERMIA complications - rare but life threatening complication. Pt will have cyanosis, muscle rigidity. Surgery is interrupted and pt will have cooling measures sch as IV solution or ice packs
ANESTHESIA- General hypothermia complications - body temp lower than normal
ANESTHESIA- conscious sedation IV drugs reduce pain intensity or awareness w/o loss of reflexes. Complication: resp depression & apnea, hypotension, excessive sedation, agitation and combativeness
TERMINATION OF SURGERY specimen handling, closing counts, wound closure: sutures, staples, steri strips, glue, drains/dressing; procedure doc
INTRAOP NURSING CARE PLAN risk for injury; impaired gas exchange, decrease cardiac output, risk for deficient fluid volume
SURGICAL COMPLICATIONS shock, hypoxia, injury, pneumonia & atelectasis
SHOCK effect of anesthesia or loss of blood
HYPOXIA inadequate oxygenation of body tissues
INJURY because of decreased level of consciousness assoc w general anesthesia or other sedatives
PNEUMONIA & ATELECTASIS drug effects and immobility place pt at risk
WOUND COMPLICATIONS Dehiscense, evisceration and infection
DEHISCENSE reopening of surgical wound; risk of this increased by wound infection, malnutrition, obesity, dehydration, & extensive abdominal wounds and injuries
EVISCERATION body organs protrude through open wound
INFECTION greatest in traumatic injuries, wounds not treated promptly and wounds were infected before surgery
GASTROINTESTINAL DISTURBANCES nausea, vomiting, impaired peristalsis and constipation; causes: anesthesia, pain, opiods, decreased peristalsis and resuming oral intake too soon
URINARY RETENTION kidneys produce urine but the pt is unablke to empty the bladder
RENAL FAILURE kidneys are unable to produce enough urine to remove wastes from body
THROMBOPHLEBITIS inflammation of veins; formation of blood clots; most often in legs after a period of immobility
THROMBI clots that cling to the walls of blood vessels
EMBOLI thrombi that break loose and flow with the blood
IMMEDIATE POSTOP NURSING CARE IN PACU assess pt's status(level of consiousness, vs), and inspect the wound of dressing; check & set up equipment (suction devices, oxygen, urinary drainage, IV lines;
IMMEDIATE POSTOP NURSING CARE IN PACU - INTERVENTIONS decreased cadiac output, ineffective breathing patterns, acute oain, disturbed though process, risk for injury,pt's family
IMMEDIATE POSTOP NURSING CARE IN PACU - DISCHARGE WHEN vs are stable, resp and circ functions are adequate, pt has minimal pain, pt is awake or can be wakened easily, complications are absent or under control, gag reflex is present. Most pts are in PACU in 1 to 2 hrs
HOMAN'S SIGN dorsiflex the foot to assess for pain in the calf. Positive sign means thrombophlebitis. Do not massage; put pt on bed rest
1st INTENTION clean sutured incisions
2ND INTENTION infected wound is left open to heal from the bottom up
TERTIARY INTENTION wound initially left open and later closed
DRAINS - STAB WOUND PENROSE DRAIN
DRAINS - HEMOVAC AND JACKSON PRATT create negative pressure when they are compressed
preventing dehiscence and eviseration avoid strain on the suture line; teach pt to support incision when coughing & getting in & out of bed; cover the wound with sterile dressings saturation w normal saline & notify the physician
s/s of pneumonia dyspnea, fatigue, fever, cough,purulent or bloody sputum, wet breath sounds.
impaired gas exchange prevention doc resp status every hr for the 1st 24 hrs. s/s pnemonia, freq position changes and coughing & deep breathing exercises most impt, incentive spirometer: to promote lung expansion
risk for infection s/s of wound infection, pain fever redness swelling and puss
Created by: jekjes
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