surgery Flashcards

1
Q

what is involved in a preoperative

A
  1. age
  2. allergies
  3. vital sign trend
  4. nutritional status
  5. habits affecting tolerance to anesthesia
  6. presence of infections
  7. use of drugs that are contraindicated prior to surgery
  8. physiological status
  9. psychological state of the patient

remember in surgerys that consent is very important!!!

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2
Q

what is general anaesthesia used for and

A
  • Used for major surgery
  • Loss of sensation and consciousness
  • Hypnosis/ analgesia/ amnesia
  • Suppression of reflexes: vomiting, coughing
  • Unable to maintain airway
  • Eg Propafol
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3
Q

what is regional anaesthesia used for

A
  • Used for major surgery
  • No loss of consciousness
  • Less complications compared to GA
  • More rapid postop recovery
  • Blocks pain experience for a region of the body
  • Includes spinal/epidural anaesthesia and peripheral nerve block
  • Nurses must monitor for migration of effect (eg breathing)
  • Eg Bupivicaine
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4
Q

what is local anaesthesia used for

A
  • Used for minor surgery
  • Loss of sensation without loss of consciousness
  • Can be injected, applied topically, aerosolised,
  • Eg Lignocaine
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5
Q

what are some things the circulating nurse does

A
  • deal with the management of unsterile activities in the operating area
  • document the nursing care of the patient
  • assessments
  • interventions
  • movement of unsterile items out of the surgical suite
  • labelling and transporting specimens
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6
Q

what are some things the scrub nurse does

A
  • is gowned and gloved and able to handle and pass sterile items into the sterile surgical field
  • ‘boss’ of the sterile field
  • assists with the actual procedure to varying diseases
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7
Q

what happens in PACU

A
  1. Stage I recovery
    - Patients may be unconscious
    - Require 1 to 1 nursing care
    - Monitoring of Airway – Breathing – Circulation – Temperature
    - Vitals signs and assessments ongoing
    - May require ongoing airway support
    - Symptom management : pain, nausea/vomiting
  2. Can transfer to Stage II recovery once they are
    - Conscious
    - Haemodynamically stable
    - Tolerate oral intake*
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8
Q

discharge criteria: PACU to ward

A
  1. Aldrete Scoring System:
    - Respiration
    - Able to deep breath and cough ?
  2. O2 Saturation
    - Able to maintain SaO2 > 92% on room air (RA) ?
  3. Consciousness
    Fully awake ?
  4. Circulation
    BP ± 20 of preop baseline?
  5. Activity
    Able to move all extremities?
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9
Q

what to assess for on arrival to the surgical ward

A
  • Airway-Breathing-Circulation-Level of Consciousness – ability to move
  • Vital signs including SaO2
  • Pain – last dose, analgesia options – current pain experience
  • Wound and drainage tubes
  • Skin: colour, appearance, moisture, temperature
  • Urinary status: catheter present ? Bladder distension?
  • Position in bed : promote patent airway, comfort and mobility
  • IV infusions and IV site(s)
  • Symptoms: nausea/vomiting
  • Emotional status
  • Family
  • Call bell
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10
Q

how to prevent respiratory complications

A

Assess for:
- Work of breathing
- Restlessness, confusion
- Activity tolerance

Plan for:
- Deep breathing and coughing
- Incentive spirometry
- Early mobilisation

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11
Q

how to prevent cardiovascular complications

A

Assess for:
- Blood pressure, heart rate,
- Skin temperature and perfusion
- Fluid balance deficit/overload
- Drain output
- IV therapy
- Syncope
- Urine output (minimum: 0.5ml/kg/hr)

Plan for:
- Balanced fluid balance
- Mobilisation to prevent clot formation; to promote cardiac output
- Heparin therapy as prescribed (LMWH)
- Bladder scan if HNPU 6-8 hr post-op

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12
Q

how to prevent integumentary complications

A

Assess for:
- Operative site healing, inflammation, union
- Monitor for signs of infection

Plan for:
- Monitor dressing for drainage
- Change dressing according to protocol
- Daily hygiene: facilitate/assist as necessary
- Mobilisation to encourage perfusion
- Keeping patient warm at all times (temp may be raised during first 48hrs)

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13
Q

how to promote comfort and rehabilitation

A
  • Assess pain regularly throughout shift and manage within tolerable limits for patient
  • Advocate on behalf of patient when analgesia inadequate
  • Encourage early mobilisation and progression towards independence
  • Refer to discharge plan and partner with patient to progress towards realistic activities of daily living
  • Refer to community support services as necessary (eg home help, bathroom assistance, district nurse)
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14
Q

things to consider when you discharge your surgical patient

A
  • Psychological Support/Encouragement
  • Management of symptoms at home (pain, nausea, dizziness)
  • Self-administering medications
  • Care of incision site
  • Progressive mobilisation
  • Dietary advice
  • Follow-up appointments
  • When things aren’t going as planned…
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