Post-Op Care and Complications Flashcards
1
Q
post-operative care and complications
A
- LOSS OF BLOOD, TAKE BACK, ATELECTASIS, HYPOTENSION
- Rounds: happen every day early in the morning for each patient that is admitted
- Ex) if you did a mastectomy on the gen surg side and then reconstruction on plastic surg side, then both of those teams would round together
2
Q
wound complications: cellulitis, subcutanous abscess
A
- Cellulitis
- Tissue center with blood supply
- Will resolve with antibiotics
- Subcutaneous abscess
- Necrotic center without blood supply
- Pus
- Will not heal unless pus is drained
- Cellulitis is on the top and subcut abscess is on the bottom
- The subcut abscess wont heal unless the pus is drained
- One of the complications that the pt is signing on to is these two – any time you cut skin you risk infection
- Wound cultures will be sent off to microbiology
- SSTI MCC is staph and strep
3
Q
wound complications: seroma
A
- Seroma
- Lymphatic fluid with liquefied fat under incision
- Concern in breast surgery/ventral hernia repairs/Axillary and groin dissection
- Edema
- Clear or yellow liquid from incision
- No erythema or acute pain
- Prevention
- Close subcutaneous layers to avoid dead space
- Use drains and don’t remove prematurely
- When you take something out, there is a potential space where fluid can accumulate
- Presents with swelling – you can tell there’s fluid under there. No redness, no infection
- This is a problem because the seroma fluid can become painful and open the incision
- Seroma tx is kind of surgeon dependent
- Jackson pratt drain is there to collect the serous fluid
- If the drain comes out too early, the pt can develop a seroma
- How to treat a seroma: you can aspirate
4
Q
wound complications: hematoma
A
- Hematoma
- most common surgical complication due to lack of coagulation of vessels during surgery
- Risk when patient is anti-coagulated with heparin or patient is an aspirin user
- Hematoma increases risk of infection
- Neck hematomas can compromise airways
- If expanding, take back to surgery may be necessary
5
Q
wound/incisional infection signs and sxs
A
- Signs and Symptoms:
- fever
- N/V/D possibly
- erythema
- edema
- exudate (fluid/pus at incision site)
6
Q
wound management
A
- Dressing over closed wounds should be removed on 3rd postop day if dry
- Dressing that are wet, should be removed and the wound inspected for drainage, redness
- Sutures/staples are removed POD #5
- Sutures over creases and on extremities are left in for 2 wks
- Sutures should be removed immediately if signs of infection are present
- Look at wound dressing – dry and intact (d/i)
- Take off dressing – no erythema, edema, exudate (e/e/e)
- If pus or fluid draining - culture
- Blisters are caused by tape or steristrips that are too tight
- Redness and itchiness is allergy to tape or use of adhesive (mastisol/benzoin)
- Treatment is remove offending agent and use of hydrocortisone 1% cream and benadryl cream if itchy
7
Q
Post op fever
A
- Most febrile patient are not infected
- Most infected patients are not febrile
- Most common cause is atelectasis
- Fever that starts on POD #5 is surgical infection
- Fever that lasts 5 days post op is surgical infection
- THE TIMING WILL GUIDE YOU AS TO CAUSE
- 5 Ws: wind, water, wound, walking, wonder – causes of postop fever
- 39 degrees on any postop day: FEVER
- Immediate fever: occurs immediately after surgery or within hours on postop day 0 or 1 (postop day 0 = day of surgery). Sources: malignant hyperthermia (high grade), catheter in the presence of a bladder infection, bacteremia, cdiff
- Acute fever: this is where wind, water, etc. come in: atelectasis (collapse of alveoli - theyre not breathing as deeply (intubation for long time, lying supine, etc.)
- Surgical causes:
- Injury to bowel with bowel leak
- fever
- tachycardia
- hypotensive
- low u/o (urinary output)
- abd tenderness out-of-proportion to procedure vs abd ttp app to proc
- Treatment: surgical intervention
- Injury to bowel with bowel leak
8
Q
atelectasis
A
- The most common cause of post op fever!
- Appears in first 48hr post-op
- Causes 90% of febrile episodes in first 48hr post-op
- Risk factors:
- Elderly
- Overweight
- Smokers
- Hx of respiratory dz
- Symptoms:
- Fever
- Tachypnea
- Tachycardia
- Signs:
- none or
- elevation of diaphragm
- scattered rales
- decreased breath sounds
9
Q
pulmonary aspiration
A
- Aspiration of secretions and gastric contents
- Due to relaxation of sphincters from anesthetic drugs or
- Insertion of ET and NG tubes
- Risk factors:
- GERD
- Eating before surgery
- Pregnant women – high intra-abdominal pressure and decreased gastric motility
- Small bowel or colon obstruction
- Usually minimum of 4-5 hrs before surgery is when we limit food intake
- SIGNS & SYMPTOMS:
- Basilar rales
- Hypoxia
- Tachypnea
- PREVENTION:
- pre-op fasting
- patient positioning
- careful intubation and extubation
- H2 blocker or PPI before intubation- reducing acidity of stomach contents thus preventing chemical pneumonitis
10
Q
pneumonia
A
- Most common cause of pulmonary complications leading to death after surgery
- Polymicrobial with predominance of gram negative bacteria
- Causes:
- Aspiration
- Atelectasis
- Copious secretions
- SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS:
- Fever
- Tachypnea
- Increased secretions
- CXR confirms consolidation
- TREATMENT:
- Culture sputum and treat with ABX
11
Q
respiratory management
A
- To prevent atelectasis, aspiration and pneumonia
- Encourage coughing
- Frequent change in position
- Get out of bed!
- I/S incentive spirometer
- Deep breathing
- Breathing, movement, aeration prevents atelectasis and aspiration
- TO PREVENT PULMONARY EMBOLISM:
- Elastic compression stocking (TEDS)
- Sequential pneumatic device (SCD)
- Heparin for high risk patients
12
Q
pulmonary embolism
A
- RISK FACTORS:
- Obesity
- Age
- Lengthy operative procedure
- Birth control pills
- Malignancy
- Trauma
- Immobilization
- Paralysis
- IBS, Crohn’s
- Chronic heart dz
- Coagulation disorders
- Longer surgery is roughly 5-6 hrs
- SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS:
- Cough
- Dyspnea
- Pleuritic chest pain
- Apprehension!
- Tachypnea
- Tachycardia
- P02 less than 70
- DIAGNOSTIC TESTS:
- Ventilation/perfusion scan
- vCT angiogram
- TREATMENT:
- High dose Heparin
13
Q
A
14
Q
Urinary retention
A
- Common in patients with hernia repair surgery
- With patients that are given spinals or epidurals
- Signs and Symptoms:
- pain and fullness over bladder with distension
- unable to void after 6 hours
- Treatment:
- Bladder scan
- if residual is greater than 500 cc, patient is catheterized
15
Q
Ileus
A
- After abdominal surgery, the colon ceases to function for a period of time 3-5 days due to:
- bowel manipulation
- intra-abd infection
- pancreatitis
- pneumonia
- peritonitis
- narcotics