Chapter 43 Flashcards
Herniated nucleus pulposes
Can press on adjacent spinal nerve causing sever burning and stabbing pain down leg or foot
Promoting low back pain
Good posture, exercise, ergonomics, proper lifting, equipment, good shoes, no prolong standing or sitting, wt within 10% of ideal, Ca intake, no smoking
Non/Surgical
Non- Williams position, Tylenol, NSAIDs, muscle relaxants, steroids, injections, diskectomy, laminectomy, spinal fusion
Post op- watch drsg, Meds, exercise, prevention, strength in LE, ability to void, pain Ctrl, CSF check, log roll, report any drainage to PCP, halo
Spinal cord injury
Loss of motor fxn, sensory, perception, reflex activity, B&B control
Complete- s.c. Damaged that eliminates all innervation below level of injury
Incomplete- injuries that allow some fxn below level of injury
Primary mechanism of SCI
Hyperflexion: head forcefully moved fwd, head on collision
Hyperextention: head suddenly forced fwd then back, vehicle collision
Axial loading: vertical compression, diving/falling
Excess rotation: turn head beyond normal, boxers
Penetrating trauma: knife or bullet
SCI facts
Trauma is leading cause of SCI 35% vehicle crashes 12,000 SCI/year 80% males- euro American Cervical spinal cord injury more common
Nursing care for SCI
Assessment: ABGs, airway, Glasgow, LOC, level of injury, bleed
Sensory: dermatomes, neuro checks, decrease in sensation from baseline is urgent
Cardio: bradycardia, hypotension, hypothermia
Resp: assess breath sounds Q2H, report adventitious/diminished
GI/GU: abd bleeding, distention, swallowing difficulties, I&O
Managing SCI
Halo, Dextran, atropine, muscle relaxant, surgery, case managers
Multiple sclerosis
Inflammatory disease affecting brain and spinal cord
Autoimmune, viral, genetic, env causes
Assessment: muscle weakness and spasticity, fatigue, numbness, ataxia, dysphagia, Diplopia, nystagmus, tinnitus, B&B dysfxn, cognitive changes, depression
Interventions: modify effects, prevent exacerbations, manage sx with Meds, improve fxn
Give interferons
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
Progressive weakness
Death within 3 years of dx
Men 40-60 y.o.
Muscle atrophy, weakness, creatinine kinase increased, tongue atrophy, face twitching, emotional incontinence, dysarthria, dysphagia
Rilutek can extend survival time
Priority problems- respiratory, swallowing, musculoskeletal concerns
Monitor pt hourly with acute SCI for :
Pulse ox < 90% or sx aspiration
Symptomatic bradycardia, decreased LOC, decrease output
Hypotension with systolic <90
Autonomic dysreflexia
Life threatening condition
Stimuli cause uninhibited reflex sympathetically
Assessment: rise in BP, bradycardia, profused sweating above lesion, goose bumps, flushing, blurred vision, nasal congestion, throbbing HA
Emergency care for autonomic dysreflexia
Sitting position or previous safe position Page PCP Assess and tx cause Check for urinary retention Check bladder distention Fecal impaction Examine skin for ulcers Monitor BP Q 10-15 min Give nifedipine or nitrate as ordered
Postop complication of ACD and fusion
Hoarseness Dysphagia Wound infection Injury to spinal cord Dura mater tears Graft and screw loosening