PUD Flashcards

1
Q

Characteristics of Gastrointestinal bleed

A
  • Sudden, severe, and w/o vomiting
  • May not have pain (common w/ NSAID use)
  • Acute Hemorrhage (more on another card)
  • Circulatory shock may develop
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2
Q

Characteristics of Acute hemorrhage from GI bleed

A
  • Sudden weakness
  • Dizziness
  • Cold moist skin
  • Passage of lost tarry stools
  • Coffee ground emesis
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3
Q

Characteristics of Penetration

A
  • Ulcer crater penetrates to adjacent organs
  • Referred pain to sites other than abdomen, Intense and persistent
  • Gradual increase in pain severity and frequency
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4
Q

Characteristics of Perforation

A
  • Release GI contents into peritoneum
  • Peritonitis causes sudden, intense epigastric pain
  • Abdomen is tender to palpation, abd muscles are rigid,
  • Hypoactive bowel sounds
  • Abd distention and third spacing
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5
Q

Characteristics of Obstruction

A

-Interference with free passage of gastric contents
-Feeling full, epigastric fullness
-Heaviness post meals
-Gastric reflex
-Weight loss
-Abd pain
-Pain is worse at the end of the day
Severe obstruction: vomiting undigested food

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6
Q

What is the common cause of PUD?

A

H. pylori

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7
Q

What ulcer causes pain almost right after a meal (30-60min or 1-2hrs)?

A

Epigastric

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8
Q

Pain PQRST for Duodenal Ulcer

A

P: Burning or cramp like pain in midepigastric or back
Q: Hurts so bad they wake up in the middle of the night
R: Relieved by ingestion of food or antacids
T:2-5 hrs after meal
-Melena & well nourished

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9
Q

Conservative care for PUD

A
  • Rest
  • Bowel rest teaching
  • No smoking or alcohol
  • Stress management
  • No NSAIDs or ASA 4-6 wks unless administered with PPI, H2 Receptor blocker, or misoprostol
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10
Q

Dietary Teaching

A
  1. Avoid spicy foods, caffeine, alcohol
  2. Six small meals
  3. Increase fluid intake
  4. Discourage smoking
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11
Q

What are the 3 major complications from PUD?

A
  1. Hemorrhage
  2. Perforation (Most lethal - watch for shock)
  3. Gastric outlet obstruction (emergent)
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12
Q

How do you treat a gastric outlet obstruction?

A
  1. Decompress the stomach with NGT
  2. PPI or H2 receptor
  3. Pain management
  4. Fluid & electrolyte replacement
  5. Surgery or balloon dilation
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13
Q

Acute management for perforation

A
  1. Notify HCP
  2. Frequent VS
  3. No oral or NG intake
  4. IV fluids
  5. Pain management
  6. Antibiotics
  7. Prepare for surgery if needed
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14
Q

Acute management for gastric outlet obstruction

A
  1. NGT to suction, irrigate
  2. Monitor I/O
  3. Reposition patient bc NGT can get stuck to wall
  4. IV fluids & electrolyte replacement
  5. Gastric residual; if less than 200mL after clamped for 8-12 hrs begin oral intake; progress to solid
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