Drains and Tubes, Chapter16 P93-103 Flashcards
What is the purpose of drains?
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- Withdrawal of fluids
2. Apposition of tissues to remove a potential space by suction
What is a Jackson-Pratt (JP) drain?
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Closed drainage system attached to a suction bulb (“grenade”)
What are the “three S’s” of Jackson-Pratt drain removal?
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- Stitch removal
- Suction discontinuation
- Slow, steady pull
What is a Penrose drain?
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Open drainage system composed of a thin rubber hose; associated with increased infection rate in clean wounds
Define the following terms: G-tube
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Gastrostomy tube; used for drainage or feeding
J-tube
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Jejunostomy tube; used for feeding; may be a small-needle catheter (remember to flush after use or it will clog) or a large, red rubber catheter
Cholecystostomy tube
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Tube placed surgically or percutaneously with ultrasound guidance to drain the gallbladder
T-tube
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- Tube placed in the common bile duct with an ascending and descending limb that forms a “T”
- Drains percutaneously; placed after common bile duct exploration
CHEST TUBES
1. What is a thoracostomy tube?
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Chest tube
- What is the purpose of a chest tube?
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To appose the parietal and visceral pleura by draining blood, pus, fluid, chyle, or air
- How is a chest tube inserted?
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- Administer local anesthetic
- Incise skin in the fourth or fifth intercostal space between the mid- and anterior-axillary lines
- Perform blunt Kelly-clamp dissection over the rib into the pleural space
- Perform finger exploration to confirm intrapleural placement
- Place tube posteriorly and superiorly
- Is the chest tube placed under or over the rib?
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Over to avoid the vessels and nerves
- What are the goals of chest tube insertion?
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- Drain the pleural cavity
- Appose parietal and visceral pleura to seal any visceral pleural holes
- In most cases, where should the chest tube be positioned?
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Posteriorly into the apex
- How can you tell on CXR if the last hole on the chest
tube is in the pleural cavity?
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Last hole is cut through the radiopaque line in the chest tube and is seen on CXR as a break in the line, which should be within the pleural cavity
- What are the cm measurements on a chest tube?
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Centimeters from the last hole on the chest tube
- What is the chest tube connected to?
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Suction, waterseal, collection system
three-chambered box, e.g., Pleuravac®
- What are the three chambers of the Pleuravac®?
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- Collection chamber
- Water seal
- Suction control
Describe how each chamber of the Pleuravac® box works
as the old three-bottle system:
1. Collection chamber
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Collects fluid, pus, blood, or chyle and measures the amount; connects to the water seal bottle and to the chest tube
- Water-seal chamber
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One-way valve—allows air to be removed from the pleural space; does not allow air to enter pleural cavity; connects to the suction control bottle and to the collection chamber
- Suction-control chamber
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Controls the amount of suction by the height of the water column; sucking in room air releases excessive suction;
connects to wall suction and to the water seal bottle
Give a good example of a water seal.
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Place a straw in a cup of water—you can blow air out but if you suck in, the straw fills with water and thus forms a one-way valve for air just like the chest tube water seal