Baseline Vital Signs (U3) Flashcards

1
Q

What does it start with?

A

Chief complaint

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2
Q

What do measurements of vital body functions do?

A

Basis for initiating care and reevaluation of interventions

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3
Q

What do the measurements include?

A

Respiration, pulse, BP, temperature, pupils

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4
Q

What is the respiratory evaluation based on?

A

Quality, wheezing, and stridor

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5
Q

What is included in quality for respiration?

A

Breathing sounds, chest expressions, increased effort

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6
Q

Qualities in terms of breathing sounds?

A

Present, diminished, absent

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7
Q

Quality in terms of chest expression?

A

Unequal or symmetricalI

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8
Q

Quality in terms of increased effort?

A

Accessory muscles, nasal flaring, retractions (between ribs, clavicles), cyanosis, shortness of breath, altered mental state

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9
Q

What is wheezing?

A

High pitched whistling

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10
Q

What is stridor, and what is it caused by?

A

High pitch on inspiration, caused by obstruction on vocal cords/epiglottis

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11
Q

What are the two main sites for pulse?

A

Peripheral, and central

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12
Q

What is part of the peripheral pulse sites?

A

Radial, brachial, posterior tibial, dorsalis pedis

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13
Q

What is part of the central pulse sites?

A

Carotid and femoral

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14
Q

What does perfusion, in terms of skin, point to ?

A

Perfusion and oxygenation

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15
Q

What are the components of perfusion and skin?

A

Colour, temperature, moisture, capillary refill

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16
Q

Locations of assessment for skin colour?

A

Nail beds, oral mucosa, conjunctiva

17
Q

What is a normal skin colour?

A

Pink

18
Q

What are traits of abnormal skin colour?

A

Paleness, cyanotic, flushed, jaundiced

19
Q

What is paleness caused by?

A

Poor circulation

20
Q

What is cyanotic caused by and what does it look like?

A

Blue/grey, poor oxygenation/perfusion

21
Q

What is a flushed look caused by?

A

Heat/CO exposure

22
Q

What is jaundice caused by?

A

Liver/gallbladder problems

23
Q

What are types of abnormal temperature?

A

Hot, cool, cold

24
Q

What is hotness caused by in terms of temperature?

A

Fever/heat exposure

25
Q

What is coolness caused by, in terms of temperature?

A

Poor perfusion/cold exposure

26
Q

What is coldness caused by, in terms of temperature?

A

Extreme cold exposure/excessively dead (just dead)

27
Q

What do you check for moisture in terms of temperature?

A

Diaphoresis/extremely dry

28
Q

How to do a capillary refill?

A

Press on a patient’s nail bed till it’s blanched/white, release and count time till it returns to pink

29
Q

Normal capillary refill?

A

Less than or equal to 2/3 seconds

30
Q

Abnormal capillary refill?

A

More than 2/3 seconds

31
Q

Why and how should you assess the pupils?

A

Easy way to assess neutral status, briefly shine a light in a patient’s eye

32
Q

What is evaluated for pupils?

A

Diameter, reactivity to light, equal size

33
Q

What is PERRL?

A

Normal pupils,

Pupils
Equal
Round
Reactive to light

34
Q

What are traits of abnormal pupils?

A

Constricted/pinpoint, dilated, unequal

35
Q

What does constricted/pinpoint pupils mean?

A

Overdose, opiate

36
Q

What does dilated pupils mean?

A

Sever lack of O2 (hypoxia), brain death, toxic substance

37
Q

What does unequal pupils mean?

A

Brain injury

38
Q

How to assess a stable and unstable patient’s vital signs?

A

Stable: every 4 hours (Q4H)
- Every 15 min if there’s medical intervention

Unstable: every 5 min (blood transfusion, PACU)