Post-operative Complications Flashcards
1
Q
fever within 24 hours post operation think?
A
- necrotizing wound infections (RARE)- Think clostridia or streptococcus
- pre-existing infection (i.e, ruptured appendicitis causing posst op fevers)
2
Q
fever within 24-72hrs think?
A
- UTI- usually catheter associated, goal to remove catheters by 48hrs post op per CMS guidelines
- Pneumonia- dx with CXR treat HCAP. be on alert for aspiration pneumonia
- IV related complications- look for physical signs of vein irritation
3
Q
- may present with fever, leukocytosis, increased secretions and pulmonary infiltrates on chest radiographs
- hypoxemia may develop, or the patient may require more supplemental oxygen to maintain the same oxyhemoglobin saturation
- respiratory distress, dyspnea, tachypnea, small tidal volumes and hypercapnia may also occur
- treat as HCAP
A
Post OP pneumonia
**postoperative pneumonia tends to occur wihtin five postoperative days*
4
Q
Fever 72hrs–> 1 week think?
A
- UTI (after catheter removed)
- pneumonia
- surgical site infection
- deep (surgical space) abscess
- anastomatic leak
- prosthetic leak
- prosthetic infection
- acalculous cholecystitis
- parotitis
- c-diff diarrhea
- line infection
also think DVT/PE, drug fever
5
Q
- s/sx: unilateral extremity pain, edema, erythema or warmth. Calf tenderness (Homan’s sign)
- dx: venous doppler
- TX: anticoagulation ASAP, consider IVC filter depending on size of clost
- keep alert for surgical bleeding (you are anticoagulating a patient who just had surgery)
A
DVT
6
Q
- inability to fully expand the lungs after surgery; collapse of alveoli
- one ofthe most common post op issues, particularly after abdominal and thorcoabdominal surgery
- asymptomatic or sx of increaed work of breathing and hypoxemia
- becomes most severe during the second postoperative night and continues thorugh the fourth postoperative night
A
atelectasis
7
Q
- typical orgnaisms: skin flora (staph), or flora of site entered
- usually appearing 3-5 days post op
- diagnosis: clincal exam (wound erythema, fluctuance, odor, purulent drainage
- tx: usually bedside I & D (need to assess the depth of infection) - deep tissue involvement requires ongoing wound care and often prolonged antibiotic therapy
A
wound infection
8
Q
- dx: usual CT scan targeted at surgical site
- tx: dependent on surgical site and patient condition. Could involve bring back to OR, I&D, IR drain placement
- tx is highly institution and surgeon dependent
A
Deep surgical site infection
9
Q
- occurs POD 5-7
- intestinal anastomosis breaks down spilling enteric contents into the abdominal cavity
- causes peritonitis and sepsis (fever, leukocytosis, abdominal pain, hypotension, tachycardia, cardiac arrhythmias)
- requires emergent re-operation to fix the leak
- SICK PATIENT- significant associated mortality
A
Anastomotic Leak
10
Q
- any type of infection affecting prosthetic implant (joint, spine, surgical mesh, vascular graft)
- can require suppressive antibiotics versus return to OR for washout and removal of prosthetic implant with subsequent antibiotic therapy
- high associated morbidity/ mortality
A
prosthetic infection
11
Q
inflammation/infefction of the parotid gland from prolonged NPO/dry mouth. Associated with sialolithiasis.
- tx: antibiotics plus sour lozenges to stimulate saliva
A
Parotitis
12
Q
- acute gallbladder infection from prolonged NPO status/ acute illness
- requires cholecystectomy or cholecystomy tube
A
acalculous cholecystitis
13
Q
post op causes of hypotension?
A
- hypovolemia d/t bleeding or dehydration
- sepsis d/t underlying problem (IE perforated viscous)
- cardiogenic shock d/t post op MI, fluid overload, arrhythmias, tamponade
- medication effect- anesthesia, opioids, benzos, epidural analgesia
14
Q
Causes of oliguria
A
- Prerenal: decreased renal blood flow d/t decreased blood volume (dehydration), decreased cardiac output. Usually modest oliguria and normal creatinine
- renal: occurs from prolonged or uncorrected prerenal OR nephrotoxic meds/contrast dye. THInk ATN
- Postrenal: think obstructive uropathy or ureteral injury
15
Q
- inability to completely void bladder volume
- risk factors: middle aged or older men, BPH, instrumented uretheral sphincter, perianal or rectal surgery, narcotics or decongestants
- monitor: measure voided outuput, bladder scan (portable ultrasound) if no void > 6hr, straight cath and record residual volume
- tx: straight cath every 6hrs or sooner if uncomfortable
A
Urinary retention