Week 10 - Pressure Injury Flashcards
What is a pressure injury? (2)
- Any lesion caused by unrelieved pressure
- results in damage to underlying tissues
What is a pressure ulcer?
- occurs over a bony prominence and are staged to classify the degree of tissue damage observed
How can we reduce the risk of pressure injury? (3)
- Identify risk
- Monitor older adults who are at risk
- Preventions/assessments (skin, do activities, etc.)
What is in the top three safety concerns for institutionalized patients? (2)
pressure ulcers
- these are preventable, but remain prevalent in LTC settingd
What are the risks of having a pressure injury? (3)
- associated with increased length of stay in hospitals
- Increased mortality
- increased rate of bacteremia and multi-drug resistant organisms
How can pressure injuries impact someones life? (2)
- decrease social wellbeing and quality of life
- high tx costs
Who is more at risk for developing pressure injuries? (10)
- Frailty
- Immobility or neurologically impaired
- Acute Illness
- Weight loss (decreased subcut)
- Poor nutrition + dehydration
- Hypoproteinemia
- Impaired sensory feedback system like diabetes
- Moist skin
- Sedated or unconscious
- Ventilation requiring head of the bed elevation
What is tissue tolerance?
- factors that impact the degree to which tissue is able to tolerate persistent pressure
Which factors impact tissue tolerance? (4)
- Blood vessels constricted by persistent pressure on the skin and underlying structures
- Cellular respiration is impaired
- cells die from ischemia and anoxia
- Inversely affected by moisture, friction, shearing, pressure, age, nutrition, anemia, low arterial pressure
Which assessment tool assesses for risk factors of pressure ulcers?
Braden scale
How can we identify risks of pressure injuries? In other words, what can we do as nurses to prevent them? (2)
- close monitoring of skin
- Initiate appropriate interventions (interprofessional collaborations) to prevent further skin breakdown and promote healing
In what ways can we observe and assess skin conditions? (5)
- daily H2T assessments of persons at risks on bony prominences
- Hyperemia (redness, hard to see in dark-skinned)
- Changes in temperature
- check existing injuries
- Assess pain and discomfort
in lecture, how can we observe skin conditions based on nutritional intake?
- Blood levels of albumin, hct, and hgb
- but particularly albumin