PT Intervention Flashcards
Indications for postural drainage
Increased pulmonary secretions
Aspiration
Atelectasis or collapse
PXNs of Trendelenburg:
Circulatory System
Pulmonary edema
CHF
HTN
PXNs of Trendelenburg:
Abdominal Problems
Obesity Ascites Pregnancy Hiatal hernia Nausea and vom Recent food consumption
PXNs of Trendelenburg:
Neurological System
Recent neurosurgery
Increased ICP
Aneurysm pxns
PXNs of Trendelenburg:
Pulmonary System
SOB
PXN to sidelying:
Circulatory system
Axillo-femoral bypass graft
PXN to sidelying:
MSK system
Humeral fx
Need for hip abduction brace
Other situations that make S/L uncomfortable (bursitis, arthritis)
Duration can be up to __ min per postural drainage position
20
Indications for percussion
- Excessive pulmonary secretions
- Aspiration
- Atelectasis or collapse due to mucus plugging obstructing airways
Considerations prior to use of percussion and shaking:
General considerations:
Pain made worse by technique
Considerations prior to use of percussion and shaking:
Circulatory system
Aneurysm pxns, hemoptysis
Considerations prior to use of percussion and shaking:
Coagulation disorders
Increased PTT, increased PT, decreased platelets (below 50,000), meds that interfere with coagulation
Considerations prior to use of percussion and shaking:
MSK
Rib fx, flail chest, degenerative bone disease, bone mets
Procedure for percussion
- Explain to pt
- Put in position
- *cover area with light-wet cloth to avoid erythema
- 3-5 minutes per PD position
- Force causes pt’s voice to quiver
What point of breathing cycle is shaking/vibration applied?
Exhalation
Indications for shaking
Pulmonary secretions
Aspiration
Atelectasis/collapse of airways from mucus plugging
Procedure for shaking/vibration
- Explain to pt
- Put in position
- Percussion first if indicated
- Fingers parallel to ribs- as pt exhales, jarring/bouncing to rib cage at that level
- 5-10 deep inhalation’s with shaking
How many breaths should pt take with vibration/shaking technique? What are risks of more?
5-10 inhalations
>10 risk of hyperventilation, increased VE from decrease in PaCO2
Who is huffing effective for?
Pts with collapsible A/W (COPD)
Procedure for assisted cough?
- Position pt against solid surface, supine w/ HOB flat or Trendelenburg or sitting in W/C against wall
- PT’s hand below subcostal angle (similar to Heimlich placement)
- Pt in hales deeply
- Pt attempts to cough- PT’s hand presses up/in
- Suction if needed
Who is assisted cough used for?
When pt can’t generate effective cough (SCI)
Who is tracheal stimulation appropriate for? Procedure?
pts unable to cough on command (infants, brain injury, stroke)
- PT’s finger or thumb just above suprasternal notch, quick inward/downward pressure on trachea triggers cough reflex
When is endotracheal suctioning appropriate? What does it consist of?
After other ACT fail to adequately remove secretions.
- standard pxns
- suction catheter based on pt, system @120 mmHg pressure, sterile glove/clean hand
- catheter inserted, when resistance felt, rotate and withdraw (10-15 seconds intermittently)
Complications of suction can include (7)
- Hypoxemia
- Brady/tachycardia
- Increased ICP
- Hypo/hypertension
- Atelectasis
- Trach damage
- Infection