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Exam (elaborations) NURSING 3770 (NURSING3770) Critical Care Final Study Guide LATEST VERSION 2022. $13.99   Add to cart

Exam (elaborations)

Exam (elaborations) NURSING 3770 (NURSING3770) Critical Care Final Study Guide LATEST VERSION 2022.

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Exam (elaborations) NURSING 3770 (NURSING3770) Critical Care Final Study Guide

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  • February 28, 2022
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Critical Care Final Study Guide

ICU Environment
 Open ICU: physician responsible for pt. admits the pt. to ICU & keeps formal responsibility for
pt. & their tx. Intensivist is a consultant w/o primary responsibility
 Closed ICU: pt. is admitted to ICU & responsibility for pt. & tx is transferred to intensivist
 Sensory Overload
o Noise
o Bright lights
o Loss of privacy- multiple caregivers, people in & out of room
o Lack of nonclinical physical contact
o Emotional & physical pain

 Confusion  Lack of control
 Sleep deprivation  Thirst
 Anxiety  Pain
 Depression  Difficult communication
 Sensory Deprivation
o Lack of visitors o White walls
o Staff stay out of room to give o No stimulation
privacy o Tv & phone $$
o
 Modification of environment
o Noise reduction: soothing music, acoustical tiles/designs, private areas for
communication for caregivers & family members
o Adequate lighting: natural lighting, night/day synchronization
o Design of new units to promote health & safety: nature in the view, bring family into
experience
o Reorient every time you walk in the room!
o
o
o Palliative Care
 Designed to relieve sx that negatively effect the pt. or the family
 Should be implemented with all patients not just the dying
 Elements:
o Early identification of end-of-life pts.
o Pain management
o Pharm & non pharm interventions to relieve: pain, anxiety, & other distressing sx
 Pain  Nausea
 Anxiety  Diarrhea
 Hunger  Confusion
 Thirst  Agitation
 Dyspnea  Sleep disturbance

 Nursing interventions:
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,Critical Care Final Study Guide

o Frequent repositioning o Peaceful environment
o Good hygiene o Pain relief
o Skin care o Spiritual needs
o
o End of Life Care in ICU
 Prep the family—not an event but a process
 Emphasizes comfort rather than cure
 Philosophy of care, not a place
 Views ding as a normal process
o Terminal Weaning
 Let both the pt & family know what happens—may or may not pass away immediately
 Ensure pt. is comfortable
 Look right at the patient, make physical contact when explaining what is happening
 Pain medication (morphine) enough to decrease WOB & antianxiety med (benzos)
o Titrate pain meds & sedation throughout relieves tachypnea, dyspnea, & use of
accessory muscles
o Ongoing assessment of response to therapy & comfort
 Patient specific for comfort, ask about religious preferences
 “Plug is pulled” by RN & RT
 Comfort cart for family
 Family may take part in post-mortem care
 Unforeseen death, ET tube & IV left in until medical examiner is present
 Family has a right to refuse autopsy however cannot refuse medical examiner
 Up to family to call funeral home
 If family wants to turn off the machine for the wrong reasons call ethics committee—no
longer need MD order
o
o MOLST Form
 Mutually agreed on between the provider & pt. or surrogate
 Clearly specifies the kind of care the pt. prefers at the end of life
o
o Ethics Committee
 Multidisciplinary
 Can say their finding contraindicates healthcare proxy’s request if it is immoral & unethical
petition court
 Nurse’s share in the moral responsibility of their institution to ensure that the best ethical
decision making process is in place to meet pt. needs, uphold the institution’s philosophy, &
preserve the integrity of the nursing profession.
o Trauma
 Look for mechanism of injury “ how did it happen?” , did their plane change? Height or
surfaces they fell from?
 Prioritize tx to ABC’s
 If neck is not stabilized stabilize w/ cervical collar—no backboards in NY
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,Critical Care Final Study Guide

o Maintain C-spine immobilization until cleared by x-ray
 Primary Survey: 1-2 mins, Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Expose
o Anterior only ; tag pt.
o Black deceased, not expected to survive
o Red immediate attention required
o Yellow delayed
o Green minor, “walking wounded”
 Secondary Survey: after life threatening injuries are identified & treated
o Examination of all body systems
o Full set of v/s, focused interventions, comfort, hx, head toe
o PT, INR, H/H, lactic acid, type & crossmatch
o Tetanus toxoid administered
o Specialty consults
o Fluid resuscitation = LR!
o Falls
 Spinal cord injury?
 Can they move their extremities? Feel them?
 Did they change their plane? Then cervical collar or immobilize neck & straighten midline
o Spinal Cord Injury
 partial
 Complete/ transection
 Nursing Care:
o Test extremities for feeling/movement
o Level of feeling or sensation—is it functioning?
o Monitor LOC & urine output!
o Cervical SCI: assess respiratory rate & depth- use of accessory muscles; edema above C4
will affect respiratory status
o SNS dysfunction occurs w/ injuries at or above T6 autonomic dysreflexia (life threatening
HTN)
 Monitor BP & heart above T6
 Monitor GI above T6
 Neurogenic bladder/bowel monitor below T10
 Treatment
 Methylprednisone (solumedrol) preserve neurologic function
 Neurogenic bladder SP tube v. self-catheterize
 if autonomic dysreflexia is suspected, take v/s & call MD!
o BURNS
o Thermal
 Flames, scalding liquids, steam, direct contact with heat source
 Cell injury by coagulation
 Severity of injury r/t heat intensity & duration of contact
 Children & elderly at greater risk at lower temperature
 Thin skin & decreased agility in moving
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, Critical Care Final Study Guide

o Chemical
 Contact, inhalation of fumes, ingestion, injection
 Severity r/t type, volume, duration of contact, concentration of agent
 Tissue damage continues after agent neutralized

o Systemic Effects of Chemical

 Acids – bathroom cleaners, swimming pool chemicals
o Necrosis of skin, can bind to serum Ca if taken po
 Alkalies – oven cleaners, fertilizers
o Loosen skin P->liquefaction necrosis & seepage into tissues. Bind to P so hard to stop
burning process
 Organic compounds – gasoline
o CNS depression, hypotension, hypothermia, pul edema, chemical pneumonitis, hepatic
& renal failure
o Warfare, terrorist attacks
 Burns from chemicals or thermal exposure
 Methamphetamine labs
o Inhalation, thermal & chemical burns

o
o Electrical
 AC – alternating current (commercial)
 Greater risk of v fib, “locks’ pt to electricity->resp muscle paralysis
 DC – direct current – lightning, car batteries
 Point of contact (entry & exit) injury depends on:
 Type & pathway of current, duration, environment, body tissue resistance, cross section of
body involved
 Urine output goal 75-100 mL/hr

o Inhalation
 Injury from carbon monoxide
 Binds to hgb better than O2->tissue hypoxia
 Injury above glottis
 Thermal- damage in pharynx& larynx, may cause airway obstruction
 Injury below glottis
 Chemical- impaired cilia, erythema, edema, hypersecretion, ulceration, increased blood flow,
bronchial spasm

o
o House Fires
 When components of our homes burn
o Degrades into toxic substances
 Carbon monoxide
 Carboxyhemoglobin (COHgb) – binding of carbon monoxide to hgb
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