NRNP 6560 Midterm exam (Answered)
Surgery risk classes
Class 1: benefits outweigh risk, should be done
Class 2a: reasonable to perform
Class 2b: should be considered
Class 3: rarely appropriate
General rules for surgery: testing
ECG before surgery only if coronary disease, except when low ri...
nrnp 6560 midterm exam answered surgery risk classes class 1 benefits outweigh risk
should be done class 2a reasonable to perform class 2b should be considered class 3 rarely appropriate genera
Written for
NRNP 6560
All documents for this subject (364)
Seller
Follow
LectDan
Reviews received
Content preview
NRNP 6560 Midterm exam (Answered)
Surgery risk classes
Class 1: benefits outweigh risk, should be done
Class 2a: reasonable to perform
Class 2b: should be considered
Class 3: rarely appropriate
General rules for surgery: testing
ECG before surgery only if coronary disease, except when low risk surgery
Stress test not indicated before surgery
Do not do prophylactic coronary revascularization
Meds before surgery
- Diabetic agents: Use insulin therapy to maintain glycemic goals(iii) Discontinue
biguanides, alpha glucosidase inhibitors, thiazolidinediones, sulfonylureas, and GLP-1
agonists
- Do not start aspirin before surgery
- Stop Warfarin 5 days before surgery. May be bridged with Lovenox.
- Do not stop statin before surgery
- Do not start beta-blocker on day of surgery, but may continue
Assessment of surgical risk
- Unstable cardiac condition (recent MI, active angina, active HF, uncontrolled HTN,
severe valvular disease), concern with CAD, CHF. arrhythmia, CVD
- patient stable or unstable?
- urgency of the procedure (oncology will be time sensitive)
- risk of procedure
- nutritional status
- immune competence
- determine functional capacity (need to be more than 4 METS, more than 10 METs
makes low risk)
Low risk surgeries
catarcts
breast biopsy
cystoscopy, vasectomy
laporascopic procedures
Plastic surgery
intermediate risk surgeries
Head/ neck surgery
thyroidectomy
Intraperitoneal
Prostate
Laminectomy
Hip/ knee
Hysterectomy
cholecystectomy
nephrectomy
non majot intrathoracic
High risk surgeries
,aortic/ cabg
transplants
spinal reconstruction
peripheral vascular surgery
Lee's revised cardiac risk index
6 points:
High risk surgery = 1
CAD = 1
CHF = 1
Cerebrovascular disease = 1
DM 1 on insulin = 1
Creat greater than 2 = 1
1 = low risk
2 = moderate risk
3 = high risk
SCIP pre-operative infection measures
- Prophylactic antibiotics should be received within 1 h prior to surgical incision
- be selected for activity against the most probable antimicrobial contaminants
- be discontinued within 24 h after the surgery end-time
Postoperative infection reduction methods
- pre-op hair removal (clippers)
- wash hands
- normothermia
- maintain euglycemia
- urinary catheters are to be removed within the first two postoperative days
Osteoarthritis: what, incidence
Slow destruction of bones/ joint followed by production of replacement collagen which
causes inflammatory changes
- older than 60
- more female after 55
- more black than white women
- men and women equal risk between 45 - 55
- abnormal height or weight (obesity)
- repetitive movement
- prior trauma (sprains/ dislocations)
- diabetic neuropathy
- genetic
Osteoarthritis findings and diagnostics
- Pain in weight bearing joints
- stiffness after sitting, gets better when arising
- feeling of instability on stairs
- fine motor skills deficit
- larger affected joints
- Heberden nodules (bony bumps on the finger joint closest to the fingernail)
,- Bouchard's nodules (bony bumps on the middle joint of the finger)
- limited ROM with crepitus
- xr shows narrowing of joint space (need anteroposterior and lateral knee films
bilaterally)
- synovial fluid is clear and without WBC
Osteoarthritis treatment
Goal is to relieve symptoms, maintain/ improve function, and avoid drug toxicity
Hand OA:
- rest/ joint protection, with splinting
- heat/ cold therapy
- topical capsaicin
- topical NSAID (trolamine salicylate) (especially for older than 75)
- Oral NSAIDS, incl COX2 inhibitors such as celecoxib (Celebrex) (may cause cardiac
problems)
- tramadol
- no opioids
Hip/ knee OA:
- weight reduction, cardiovascular exercises
- transcutanous external nerve stimulator
- acetaminophen
- Topical NSAIDS (knee)
- intraarticular corticosteroid injections
- surgery (joint replacement)
Rheumatoid arthritis: what, who
chronic, systemic autoimmune disease that causes inflammation of connective tissue,
first that of jionts them other soft tissues (renal, cardiovascular, pulm). TNF-alpha plays
a big role
- more women than men
- unknown cause
- Epstein Barr virus
Rheumatoid arthritis: Findings and diagnostics
- symmetric joint/ muscle pain, worse in the morning then gets better
- weakness, fatigue
- anorexia, weight loss
- generalized malaise
- swollen joints/ boggy feeling of joints with deformity of joints
- warm, red skin on affected joints
later:
- pleural effusions and pulmonary nodules
- inflammation of sclerea (scleritis)
- pericarditis, myocarditis
- splenomegaly (Felty's syndrome)
, - anemia (hypochromic, microcytic) with low ferritin
- possibly: positive rheumatoid factor
- XR: joint swelling, later cortical and space thinning
- synovial fluid: yellow, thick with elevated WBC up to 100.000
Felty's syndrome
rheumatoid arthritis, splenomegaly, neutropenia
Rheumatoid arthritis treatment
- early treatment better than stepwise
- early referral rheumatologist
- disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs):
- methotrexate ( no alcohol, monitor renal and liver, give with folic acid)
- cyclosporine
- Gold preparations (can cause thrombocytopenia)
- Hydroxychloroquine: antimalarial drug (may cause visual changes, monitor)
- sulfasalazine, moderate RA
- Leflunomide, moderate to severe RA
- Etanercept
- monitor liver function with DMARDs
- screen for TB (skin test) and Hep B
- surgery: joint debridement, joint replacement
Gout: what, who
Inflammatory disorder in response to high uric acid production/ levels in blood and
synovial fluid causing crystallization which causes inflammation (Type A and
Mediterranean)
- impaired renal function which causes excess uric acid
- foods high in purine, such as dairy, red meat, shellfish, beer
Gout findings, diagnostics
- acute painful joint, often great toe (warm, swollen)
- pain at night
- flank pain because of renal calculi
- fever
- leukocytosis
- elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate
- tophi (bump under skin) on ear
- limited joint motion
- elevated serum uric acid (greater than 7mg/dl)
- urate crystals seen with joint aspiration
- xr: joint erosion and renal stones
Gout treatment
- NSAIDS: naproxen, ondomethacin, sulindac
- Colchicine for those who do not tolerate NSAIDS (caution with renal impairment). Also
for prophylaxis
- Corticosteroids, if NSAIDS and colchicine not tolerated
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller LectDan. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for $11.49. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.