TLO 2.3 Nutrition, Fluid Balance Adult Flashcards

1
Q

Fluid compartments: 2 types

A
Intracellular fluid (ICF)
Extracellular fluid (ECF)
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2
Q

Volume regulation

A

Osmosis
Diffusion
Filtration
Active Transport

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3
Q

Fluid and electrolyte balance
Maintenance
Nursing role

A

Maintenance of homeostasis:
Requires fluid and electrolyte balance within a vary small range in a healthy body
Diseases and treatment may alter fluid and electrolyte balance

Nursing role:
Anticipate the potential for alterations in fluid and electrolyte balance
Recognize the signs and symptoms of imbalances
Intervene with appropriate actions
Evaluate interventions

Adults: 1500 mL/day of fluid intake

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4
Q

Distribution of body fluids

Calculation of fluids

A

1 liter of water weighs 2.2 lbs (1kg)

Sudden body weight changes is an indicator of fluid gain

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5
Q

Body fluids

Intracellular fluids?

A

Inside the cells
K+, Mg++, phosphate, glucose, O2
About 2/3 of total body water

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6
Q

Body fluids

Extracellular fluids?

A

Outside of cell
Na+, Chloride, Bicarbonate
About 1/2 of total body water

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7
Q

Positive imbalance?

A

More input than output

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8
Q

Negative imbalance?

A

More output than input

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9
Q

Extracellular fluids: 2 major divisions

A

Two major divisions:
Intravascular: plasma (20% of ECF)
Interstitial: fluid btw cells including lymph (80% of ECF)

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10
Q

Extracellular fluids: 1 minor division

A

One minor division:
Transcellular fluids: specialized compartments
CSF, synovial, pleural, pericardia, peritoneal fluids

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11
Q

Movement of body fluids

A

Osmosis: fluid moves passively from areas with more fluid to areas with less fluid

Diffusion: solutes move from areas of higher concentration to areas of lower concentration until the concentration is equal in both areas

Filtration: movement of fluids through capillaries resulting from blood pushing against the walls of the capillary. Hydrostatic pressure forces fluids and solutes through capillary wall

Active transport: energy from ATP moves solutes from an area of lower concentration to an area of higher concentration. i.e. sodium-potassium pump

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12
Q

Example: 70 kg man
42 L water
28 L intracellular

A

Water: 42 L

Intracellular: 28 L

Extracellular: 14 L of water

  • Interstitial: 10 L
  • Intravascular: 3 L
  • Transcellular: 1 L at a given time

**3-6 L of fluid is secreted into and reabsorbed from the GI tract

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13
Q

Fluid spacing

Distribution of body water

A

First spacing: normal distribution of fluid in the ICF and ECF compartments

Second spacing: abnormal accumulation of interstitial fluid (edema)

Third spacing: Fluid accumulates in a portion of the body (transcellular fluid) that is not easily exchanged
Trapped and unavailable for functional use
-ascites
-abdominal cavity with peritonitis
-edema with burns, trauma, sepsis

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14
Q

Fluid balance: NI

A

I/O: provides valuable data regarding fluid and electrolyte problems. Excessive intake or output losses can be identified
Daily weight

Assess for:

  • cardiovascular changes
  • respiratory changes
  • neurologic changes
  • skin turgor
  • monitor rates of IV infusions
  • no oral fluids with NG suction (unless ordered), increases electrolyte loss
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15
Q

Urine output

A

Adult: 30 mL/hr
Children: 1 g of west diaper = 1 mL urine

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16
Q

Skin assessment:

A
Skin turgor and color: tenting, poor skin tented for 20-30 sec
Weight
Edema
Abnormal assessment
Assessment of mouth and mucus membranes
Anterior fontanel in children
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17
Q

Skin care, NI

A

Protect edematous tissue

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18
Q

Intake includes:

A

Oral
IV
Tube feeding
Retained irrigates

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19
Q

Output includes:

A
Urine (adult 30mL/hr)
Excess perspiration
Wound drainage (est)
Perspiration (est)
Vomitus
Diarrhea
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20
Q

Urine specific gravity

A

> 0.125 concentrated urine (dehydration)

<1.010 diluted urine (fluid overload)

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21
Q

Fluid balance

Daily weights

A
Easiest measurement of volume status
Required standardized conditions
-same clothes
-bed weight: same linens, pillows, drainage bags off bed
Same time of day
Same calibrated scale
  • *an increase of 1 kg is = to 1000mL of fluid retention
  • *on normal diet, NOT NPO
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22
Q

Skin care NI

A
protect edematous tissue
Changes in position
Elevate edematous extremities
Frequent skin care
Application of moisturizing creams
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23
Q

Fluid imbalances

A

Sodium: hyper/hypo natremia
Potassium: hyper/hypo kalemia
Calcium: hyper/hypo calcemia
Magnesium: hyper/hypo magnesium

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24
Q

Sodium Na++

A
Normal serum sodium levels
Major cation found in ECF
Role
Works with K+ and Ca++ to conduct nerve impulses
Comes
Kidneys regulate sodium balance in body
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25
Q

Sodium Na++

A
Normal serum sodium levels 135-145 mEq/L
Major cation found in ECF
Role is to maintain fluid volume in body
Regulates osmolality and BP
Works with K+ and Ca++ to conduct nerve impulses
Comes from dietary intake
Kidneys regulate sodium balance in body
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26
Q

Hyponatremia (sodium) causes?

A

Fluid gain:
IV fluid overload
Fluid overload after drinking water
Dilutional states (hyperglycemia, SIADH (symptom of the inappropriate diuretic hormone), heart failure)

Sodium loss:
Diuretic therapy
GI Tract (vomiting, diarrhea, GI suction, fistulas)
Excessive sweating

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27
Q

Hyponatremia (sodium) s/s

A
Decreased serum osmolality
Muscle cramps, weakness
HA
Lethargy, stupor, coma
Anorexia, nausea, vomiting
Hypotension, shock
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28
Q

Hyponatremia (sodium) diagnostic

A

Serum sodium <135 mEq/L
Urine specific gravity <1.010
Serum sodium critical level <110 mEq/L
**do not correct level too fast or cerebral edema

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29
Q

Hyponatremia (sodium) nursing management

A
monitor neurological signs 
daily weights
I/O, VS
Urine color consistency and amount
Maintain fluid restriction
Admin 3% NaCl solution as ordered, if critically low to prevent seizures
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30
Q

Hypernatremia (sodium) causes

A

Fluid volume deficit:
not drinking enough fluids
eating high sodium diet
excessive water loss (high fever, heatstroke, diarrhea)

Interruption of body's regulatory mechanism:
diabetes insipidus
renal failure
hyperaldosteronism
Cushing syndrome
uncontrolled DM
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31
Q

Hypernatremia (sodium) s/s

A
increased thirst, oliguria
increased urine specific gravity
dry skin and mucous membranes, decreased skin turgor, furrowed tongue, dry mouth
HA, restlessness
seizures, coma
trachy, hypotension, vascular collapse
decrease urine output
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32
Q

Hypernatremia (sodium) diagnosis

A

Serum sodium >145
Serum osmolality >300
Specific gravity >1.030

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33
Q

Hypernatremia (sodium) nursing management

A

VS
I/O
Daily weight
Edema- peripheral extremities, sacrum, face
Risk for seizures
Correction need to be provided slowly to avoid a shift of water into the cerebral cells

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34
Q

Potassium (kalemia)

A
Normal serum levels 3.5-5 mEq/L
Maintains fluid balance in cells
Contracts skeletal, cardiac and smoot muscle
Maintains acid base balance
Kidneys are the primary regulators
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35
Q

Hypokalemia (potassium) causes

A

Diuretics
Inadequate intake
GI losses: diarrhea, vomiting, GI suction, ostomy fluids
Major surgery/hemorrhage

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36
Q

Hypokalemia (potassium) s/s

A
Early signs: fatigue and muscle weakness, leg cramps
Weak, irregular pulse
Bradycardia
Decrease GI motility
EKG changes
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37
Q

Hypokalemia (potassium) diagnosis normal

A

Serum potassium <3.5 mEq/L

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38
Q

Hyperkalemia (potassium) causes

A

Excessive intake of potassium containing foods, oral or IV potassium
Potassium sparing diuretics
Renal failure
Addison disease
Increased K+ intake and absorption: rapid IV blood, salt substitute, IV K+)
Shift of K+ from cells into the ECF: trauma, chemo, diabetic ketoacidosis

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39
Q

Hyperkalemia (potassium) s/s

A
muscle cramping
muscle weakness, bilateral in quadriceps
increased GI motility
transient ab cramps and diarrhea
slow, irregular HR
hypotension
cardiac dysrhythmias
EKG changes
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40
Q

Hyperkalemia (potassium) diagnostic

A

Serum potassium >5.0 mEq/L

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41
Q

Hyperkalemia (potassium) treatment

A

Eliminate oral and IV K+
Increase elimination of K+: diuretics, dialysis, Kayexalate
IV glucose and insulin: force K+ to ICF
Admin calcium gluconate to reverse membrane excitability

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42
Q

Hyper and Hypo kalemia (potassium) nursing management

A
Admin oral potassium supplement as ordered
Pt education
Monitor levels
Avoid high potassium foods
Avoid salt substitutes with potassium
S/S of hypokalemia
Telemetry
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43
Q

Calcium

what is it

A

Normal serum calcium is 8.9-10 mg/dl
Necessary for development of strong teeth and bones
Helps maintain muscle tone
Nerve transmission and contraction of skeletal and cardiac muscles
Inverse relationship with Phosphorus

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44
Q

Hypocalcemia causes

A
Chronic disease: alcoholism, ESRD
Poor intake
Inadequate absorption: Crohn's disease
Surgical removal of thyroid or parathyroid
Inadequate V D
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45
Q

Hypocalcemia s/s

A
Numbness/tingling of nose, ears, fingertips
Positive Chvostek sign
Positive Trousseau sign
Hyperactive deep tendon reflexes
EKG changes
Seizures
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46
Q

Hypocalcemia diagnosic

A

Serum Ca++ <8.5-9 mg/dl

Increased Parathyroid hormones

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47
Q

Hypercalcemia causes

A
Excessive intake of C++ or V D
Renal failure
Hyperparathyroidism
Invasive/metastatic cancers
Diuretics (thiazides)
Prolonged immobilization
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48
Q

Hypercalcemia s/s

A
Anorexia, N/V, constipation
Lethargy, fatigue
Decreased LOC
Diminished reflexes
Confusion
Severe: cardiac arrest
EKG changes
49
Q

Hypercalcemia diagnosic

A

Serum calcium levels >11 mg/dl

50
Q

Magnesium

A

Normal range 1.5-2.5 mEq/L or 1.8-3 mg/dL
A coenzyme in metabolism of carbs and protein
Maintains strong healthy bones
Influences contractility of cardiac muscles
Helps sodium and potassium ions cross the cell membrane
Regulates muscle contractions

51
Q

Hypomagnesium causes

A

Occurs along with decreased potassium and calcium
Malabsorption disorders: IBD, bowel resection, gastric bypass surgery
Deficient Mg intake and absorption
Alcoholism
Diuretics (loop and osmotic)
Some chemotherapeutic agents

52
Q

Hypomagnesium s/s

A
Positive Chvostek's and Trousseau's sign
Hyperactive deep tendon relaxes
Muscle cramps and twitching, grimacing, dysphagia
Hypertension, tetany, seizures
Cardiac dysrhythmia, tachy
53
Q

Hypomagnesium diagnostic

A

Magnesium <1.5 mEq/L

Calcium and potassium may be low

54
Q

Hypermagnesium s/s

A
muscle weakness
lethargy
diaphoresis
decreased deep tendon reflexes
bradycardia
severe: resp failure, dysrhythmias, cardiac arrest
55
Q

Hypermagnesium diagnostic

A

Magnesium level >2.5 mEq/L

Monitor BUN and Creatinine

56
Q

Hypermagnesium causes

A

Renal failure
DM or DKA
Leukemia

57
Q

Thyroid gland

A

Secretes two hormones: thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3)
They affect metabolic rate, caloric requirements, oxygen consumption, carbohydrate and lipid metabolism and growth and development, brain function

58
Q

Thyroid diagnostic test

Triiodothyronine (T3)

A

Purpose:

To diagnose hyperthyroidism and to compare with T3 and T4 for diagnosis of thyroid disorder

59
Q

Thyroid diagnostic test

Thyroxine (T4)

A

Purpose:

To determine thyroid function and aid in the diagnosis of hyperthyroidism and hypothyroidism

60
Q

Thyroid diagnostic test

Thyroid-Stimulating hormone (TSH)

A

Purpose:
Blood test done to measure levels of T4 to identify circulating TSH
-decreased T4 and a normal increased TSH can indicate a thyroid disorder
-decreased T4 and a decreased TSH level can indicate pituitary disorder

61
Q

Thyroid diagnostic test NI

A

Tell patient to avoid shellfish for several days prior to testing

62
Q

Hypothyroidism cause

A

Insufficient thyroid hormone production

-atrophy of thyroid

63
Q

Hypothyroidism manifestations and s/s

A
fluid retention, edema
decreased appetite
weight gain
constipation
dry skin
dyspnea
pallor
hoarseness
muscle stiffness
cold intolerance
mask like appearance to face
64
Q

Hypothyroidism diagnostic and treatment

A

Diagnosis:
Increased TSH
Decreased T4 and T3

Treatment:
Levothyroxine
Med admin r/t thyroid preparations

65
Q

Hyperthyroidism causes

A

Hyperactivity of thyroid gland, excessive delivery of TH to tissues
Graves disease
Toxic multinodular goiter

66
Q

Hyperthyroidism manifestations

A
Increased appetite
Weight loss
Nervousness
Restlessness
Excitability
Tachy
N/V/D
67
Q

Hyperthyroidism diagnosis

A

Diagnostic: TSH decreased, T4 and T3 increased

68
Q

Hyperthyroidism treatment

A

Antithyroid meds

Surgical treatment: Thyroidectomy

69
Q

Hypoparathyroid

A

Damage or inadvertent removal
Causes hypocalcemia and elevated blood phosphate

S/S
Numbness/tingling of mouth/finger tips
Muscle spasms hands/feet
Convulsions
Laryngeal spasms
tetany

Treatment:
Supplemental calcium
Increase calcium diet
Vit D

70
Q

Hyperparathyroid

A

Hyperplasia or adenoma of glands
Secondary to chronic hypocalcemia
R/t chronic renal failure

S/S
Hypercalcemia
Musculoskeletal
Renal
GI
Cardiovascular

Treatment:
Mild: fluids, increase activity, avoid calcium
Severe: hospitalization, meds
Surgical removal

71
Q

Hypopituitarism

A

Pituitary tumors
Surgical removal
Radiation of gland
Infection/trauma of gland

S/S
Will vary related to deficient hormone

Treatment:
Hormone replacement

72
Q

Hyperpituitarism

A

Benign adenoma

S/S
Visual changes
Gigantism
Acromegaly

Treatment:
Gigantism: most often r/t tumor, very rare
Acromegaly: surgical removal or irradiation of pituitary tumor

73
Q

Nasogastric suction

Salem sump

A

Salem sump (16f):
Double lumen
Radiopaque
1st lumen suction of gastric contents
2nd lumen blue extension (pig tail) open to room air to maintain a continuous flow of atmospheric air
Controls the amount of suction pressure placed on stomach wall
Prevents injury, ulcer

74
Q

Complications of NG suction

A

Metabolic alkalosis occurs with loss of acid from stomach

Electrolyte imbalance: hyponatremia, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia

75
Q

Enteral feeding

A

Used to meet calorie and protein requirements

76
Q

Enteral feeding indications

A

Indications for tube feeding: diff swallowing, unresponsive, oral/neck surgery/trauma

77
Q

Methods of administration enteral feeding

A

Bolus feeding
Continuous feeding (reduces risk of aspiration)
Cyclic

78
Q
Enteral Tube feeding
Nasogastric
Nasoduodenal
Gastrostomy (G tube, PEG tube)
Jejunostomy (J tube)
A

Nasogastric: 8-12 f, placed through nose, into stomach, attached to nose

Nasoduodenal: weighted tip, <4 wk, placed through nose to small intestine, attached to nose

Gastrostomy (G tube, PEG tube): >4 wk, placed directly through skin into stomach, attached to abdominal wall and secured with bumper/balloon

Jejunostomy (J tube): preferred with reflux, >4 wk, placed directly through skin to small intestine

79
Q

Nasogastric tube

Levine Tube

A

Levin tube (14-16f)
Single lumen, holes near tip
Prevent accumulation of intestinal liquids and gas during and following surgery.
Prevents N/V and distention due to reduced peristaltic action

80
Q

Nasogastric suction nursing responsibilities

A

Assess condition of patients nares
Mouth care q 2 hr
NPO, unless ice chips ordered by provider
Flush tube with NS if needed
Verify placement: x-ray, pH, aspirate stomach contents, air bonus
Turn patient regularly to promote emptying of stomach
Accurate I/O
Document gastric characteristics, amounts

81
Q

Parenteral nutrition (IV nutrition)

A

Parenteral nutrition: Nutrition is provided through IV

Crystalline amino acids, hypertonic dextrose, electrolytes, vitamins and trace elements

TPN: admin through a central line, protein and dextrose, fats

Purposes: patients unable to ingest or absorb nutrients

82
Q

Collaborative care for parenteral nutrition

A
Clinical and lab monitoring
Goal: to use the GI tract asap
Xray confirmation 
Maintain securement of device, sterile dressing
Always uses infusion pump
Assess for infection, I/O, daily weight
83
Q

What is PPN?

A

Peripheral parental nutrition

Difference between TPN and PPN is the concentration of dextrose, at least 20% dextrose need TPN

84
Q

Diet types

A

Consistency: 5 food types, depend on level

Food type: clear, full, diabetic, renal, dysphagia, reg

85
Q

Antiemetics

A

Zofran (ondansetron): serotonin receptor antagonist, most effective for N/V
NI: admin 30-60 min prior, oral/IV, monitor liver function and clotting

Reglan: (metoclopramide): dopamine antagonist
Increases lower esophageal sphincter pressure and enhances the rate of gastric emptying
Side effects: drowsiness, sedation, hypotension, akathisia (uncontrolled motor restlessness) and dystonic (facial muscle spams, neck, back) extrapyramidal effects
**older adults more sensitive

86
Q

Gastrointestinal diagnostic test

A

X-ray: ab flat plate
No prep
Shows gas and stool pattern, patency of GI, inflammation.
Used to congenital anomalies in children, ab pain, appendicitis

87
Q

Upper GI barium swallow

A

NPO
Drink medium or contrast given per NG tube
Various x-rays in different position
Flush body with fluids to prevent impaction
Sometimes laxative needed
Stool will be white

88
Q

Upper GI Endoscopy

A

Fiberoptic camera goes down esophagus, views esophagus, stomach, duodenum, biopsy can be obtained
NPO several hr prior
Conscious sedation
For adults: medication may be used to subdue gag reflex (NPO until gag returns)
Signed consent: risk for bleeding/trauma

89
Q

Diagnostic test: Gastric analysis

A

Evaluate gastric contents of fasting, acidity, appearance, volume
Determines proper functioning of stomach
Educate patient, no smoking, eating, drinking 8-12 hr prior

90
Q

Diagnostic test: Ultrasonography

A

Used to identify ab masses, ascites, disorders of appendix with high sound waves
No food, drink, smoke, gum 6 hr prior

91
Q

Diagnostic test: cholecystogram

A

X-ray, evaluate gallbladder

Gallbladder cancer, decreased or blocked bile flow in the biliary duct system of liver

92
Q

Diagnostic test: Cholangiogram

A

Primarily used to look at larger bile ducts within the liver and outside the liver
Used to locate gallstones

93
Q

Biliary tract problems

A

Gallstones and inflammation of the gallbladder
Most common symptom is pain: biliary colic after ingesting a fatty meal
Other symptoms: N/V, fever if infection, jaundice if obstruction

94
Q

Cholelithiasis

A

Gallstones
Risk factors: age, family history, obesity, hyperlipidemia, rapid weight loss, female, hormonal, contraceptives, sickle cell
Pain, N/V

95
Q

Cholecystitis

A

Inflammation of the gallbladder

Anorexia, N/V, RUQ tenderness, chills, fever

96
Q

Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP)

A

Used primarily for adults. Endoscope that travels from mouth down to common bile duct and pancreatic ducts
Preprocedural: NPO, signed consent, admin sedation, antibiotics
Postprocedural: V/S, check for signs of perforation or infection. Pancreatitis main problem. Check for return gag

97
Q

Nursing management of surgical patient: laparoscopic cholecystectomy

A

Patient experience N/V, shoulder pain from gas infusion into ab
Position with head and torso elevated
Ambulate to rid gases
Possibility of bile leakage causing chemical peritonitis = RUQ pain, tachy, hypotension

98
Q

Nursing management of the patient with an open cholecystectomy

A

Same care as for an ab incision (issuers with decreased peristalsis, pain, infection, lung infection, DVT)
May divert bile using T tube: do not clamp tube, provides external drainage of bile
May need Vit K shots if bile diverted

99
Q

GERD treatment

A

Medications:
Antacids- neutralize HCL
Anti-secretory agents- decrease secretions of HCL acid by stomach. Zantac, Pepcid
Proton pump inhibitors- inhibit pump mechanism responsible for secretion of H+ ions. Prilosec, Protonix
Sucralfate
Reglan

100
Q

GERD Nursing care: adult

A
Teach about diet, meds, lifestyle changes
Stop smoking
Reduce alcohol consumption
Elevate HOB
Patient teaching
Follow up with PCP
Watch for cancer
101
Q

GERD: surgical

A
Fundoplication:
Fundus of stomach is wrapped around distal esophagus and sutured
Postop care:
NPO until peristalsis
IV fluids
Prevent infection
Monitor respiratory
102
Q

Hiatal Hernia

A

Part of the stomach protrudes through the esophageal hiatus of the diaphragm into the thoracic cavity

Causes:
weakened anchors of the esophageal hiatus
shortening of the esophagus
increased intra ab pressure

Diagnosis:
barium swallow
upper endoscopy

Symptoms:
heartburn

Treatment:
medication, if ineffective, Nissen fundoplication is done laparoscopically
prevents the gastroesophageal junction from slipping into the thoracic cavity

103
Q

Peptic Ulcer Disease (PUD)

A

Main cause:
presence of helicobacter pylori bacteria
breakdown in gastric mucosal barrier
acid in stomach injures tissue

Risk:
use of NSAIDs, stress, alcohol
smoking
H. Pylori

104
Q

PUD and H. Pylori

A

H. Pylori
Bacteria spread person to person by oral/oral-fecal/oral
Produces enzymes that break down the mucous gel that protects the gastric mucosa
-testing: biopsy, fecal antigen, breath test
-treatment: triple therapy (PPI and 2 antibiotics)
**PPI= proton pump inhibitor

105
Q

Peptic ulcer disease

Main assessment

A
Main assessment:
Pain, gnawing, burning, caching, hunger like
Epigastric region
May have heart burn or regurgitation
Pain is 1-2 hours after eating

Duodenal ulcers:
Pain on empty stomach
Relieved by food and antacids

106
Q

Peptic ulcer

Complication - Perforation

A

Perforation can lead to chemical peritonitis.
Occurs with duodenal ulcers
Sudden sharp and severe pain in mid epigastrium, pain spreads to entire abdomen, becomes rigid, hard and tender

Nursing care:
insert NG tube to empty gastric contents
admin IV fluids
collaborate with provider
prepare for endoscopic or surgery
107
Q

Peptic ulcer diagnostic

A
Endoscopy, Upper GI
Urea breath test
Barium swallow
CBC
Liver enzymes
Stool sample to check for blood
108
Q

Peptic ulcer meds, treatment

A
Diet:
Teach patient to avoid food that cause discomfort
Maintain good nutrition
Smoking discourage
Mild alcohol intake permitted

Medications:
Two antibiotics for two weeks
Proton pump inhibitor

109
Q

Peptic ulcer surgical treatment criteria

A
Criteria:
Disease has resulted in hemorrhage, perforation, obstruction or disease cannot be controlled by medical management
Subtotal gastrectomy (Billroth I and Billroth II), partial removal of the stomach
110
Q

Peptic ulcer surgical

A

Vagotomy (surgical operation in which one or more branches of the vagus nerve are cut, typically to reduce the rate of gastric secretion):
Performed when acid production in the stomach can not be reduced by other means. Purpose is to disable the acid producing capacity of stomach

Subtotal gastrectomy:
Partial removal of portion of the stomach, distal third

Total gastrectomy:
Removal of entire stomach for diffuse cancer that has spread into mucosa

111
Q

Peptic ulcer post surgical complications

A

Malabsorption:
vitamin B12, folic acid, calcium, Vit D

Dumping syndrome: most common problem
Food bolus pulls water into intestines. Peristalsis is stimulated and motility increased
Rapid dumping of gastric contents
Managed by small or more frequent meals
Decrease carbs with meals
112
Q

Peptic ulcer postsurgical care

A

Rest the surgical area to prevent pain, bleeding and infection
Maintain NG tube
Surgical care for any ab surgery
Liberal use of pain med to prevent immobility and atelectasis

113
Q

Bariatric surgery criteria

A

BMI >40 kg/m or >35 kg/m with one or more serious complications
Psychiatric and social stability ad willingness to cooperate with long term follow up

114
Q

Bariatric post op care

A

Similar to ab surgery
More chance of all complications
On a specific diet that involves taking a small quantities of food with a progression to larger quantities
May need Vit supplement in the beginning

115
Q

Gastric bypass

Roux-en-Y gastric bypass

A

Small stomach pouch is created to restrict food intake
Y shaped section of the jejunum is then attached to the pouch to allow food to bypass the lower stomach and duodenum
Calorie and nutrient absorption is limited
Deficiencies are common: iron, calcium, Vit B12, fat soluble vit
Risk for dumping syndrome

116
Q

Gastric by pass

Biliopancreatic bypass with duodenal switch

A

More complex procedure and higher risk of nutritional deficiencies
Performed in 2 stages, sleeve created during first stage. Duodenum and jejunum are bypassed by connecting ileum to stomach pouch
Restricts nutrient intake and absorption for rapid weight loss
Deficiencies are common: iron, calcium, Vit B12, fatty soluble vit

117
Q

Gastric bypass

Vertical sleeve gastrectomy

A

Only the first stage of procedure (sleeve only), becoming more popular
Restricts intake, slows digestions

118
Q

Gastric bypass postop complication

A
Anastomosis leak with peritonitis
Abdominal wall hernia
Gallstones
Wound infections
DVT/PE
Nutritional deficiencies
Dumping syndrome
119
Q

Gastric bypass

Adjustable gastric banding

A

Safer but less effective in long term
Hollow band of silicone is placed under the upper portion of the stomach and inflated
Few nutritional deficiencies
vomiting is common risk for restrictive procedures
Band can clip or break leading to further surgery
Few keep weigh toff >10 years