osteomyelitis Flashcards
patho of osteomyelitis
Infection in bone caused by bacteria (most often), viruses, parasites, or fungi. The infection may be acute or chronic. Invasion by one or more pathogenic organisms, stimulates the inflammatory response in bone tissue. The inflammation produces an increased vascular leak and edema, often involving the surrounding soft tissues.
3 different categoris of osteomyelitis
- exogenous
- endogenous
- continguous
exogenous
( outside of body)infectious organisms enter from outside the body as in open fracture or after surgery
endogenous
( inside body) infectious organisms are carried by the blood stream from other area of infection in the body
continguous
bone infection results from skin infection of adjacent tissue
acute osteomyelitis
- Fever, temp usually above 101F
- Swelling around the affected area
- Possible erythema and heat in affected area
- Tenderness of the affected area
- Bone pain that is constant, localized, and pulsating, and worsens with movement
- At risk for sepsis: blood cultures and than antibiotics
chronic osteomyelitis
- Treatment is delayed
- Foot ulcers or bone surgery
- Sinus tract formation: tract of infection leading up the bone
- Localized pain
- Draining from the affected area
- Intermittent with flare up
risk factors for osteomyelitis
Diabetes mellitus Severe atherosclerosis MRSA infection Elderly Skin ulceration or other wounds Recent Surgery Iv drug user Pneomonia Uti Contingious oa from the ulcer wound
wbc normal range
4.5-11
wbc clinical significance
18.5
elevated due to infection
erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR)
0-20 mm/hr
ESR clinical significance
24 mm/hr
faster than normal rate may indicate inflammation in the body
Starts slightly elevated and rises with more infection
find no advanced directivies. what is your responsibility
Ask the patient if he has an existing advanced directive. If the patient does not have one or does not know what it is, you should educate the patient about what it is and why it is necessary. Put a plan in place before the patient’s surgery, and if the patient does not want an advanced directive, respect his wishes.
E.B. asks you “What do they do with my leg after it is removed?” How do you respond?
It’s your choice on what you wish to happen after it is amputated. Some cultures decide to have the amputation stored for later burial or buried immediately. Other times, it can be donated for scientific research, or sent to biohazardous waste and is cremated.
Culturally component nursing care
not undergoing an AKA what would be the nonsurgical management for a patient with osteomyelitis?
4-6 weeks of antimicrobial therapy, more than 1 antimicrobial may be prescribed, it is important that the medication to be given at the specifically prescribed times to maintain therapeutic serum levels
- Central lines for infusion therapy
- Hypobaric oxygen therapy: extreme high concentration of oxygen. Oxygen diffuse in bone to help with healing process