Module 7: GI And Integumentary Flashcards

1
Q

Important structures of the GI Region?

A
Esophagus
Stomach
Pancreas
Liver
Gallbladder
Small Intestine
Appendix
Large Intestine
Rectum
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2
Q

Function of the Esophagus?

A

Peristalsis

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3
Q

Function of the Stomach?

A

mix food with enzymes to continue the process of digestion

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4
Q

Peristalsis

A

movement/muscle contractions

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5
Q

Function of the Pancreas

A

Secrete digestive enzymes into the duodenum to break down proteins, fats, and carbs

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6
Q

Where is the pancreas located?

A

Mid-Epigastric Region, behind the liver

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7
Q

Function of the Liver?

A

process absorbed nutrients from the small intestine

produce bile that is secreted into the small intestine to help digest fat

Detoxify

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8
Q

Function of the Gall Bladder?

A

store and concentrate bile

it is within the liver connected to the small intestine for bile release

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9
Q

3 Parts of the Small Intestine

A

Duodenum –> Jejunum –> Ileum

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10
Q

Function of the Small intestines

A

Breaks down food with pancreas and liver help

peristalsis

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11
Q

How long is the S intestine?

A

22 foot long muscular tube

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12
Q

What is the Duodenum largely responsible for?

A

continuous breaking down process of food

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13
Q

What is the Jejunum and Ileum mainly responsible for?

A

absorption of nutrients into the bloodstream

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14
Q

What are the contents of the small intestine ? (form)

A

Semi Solid to Liquid

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15
Q

Once nutrients are absorbed in the small intestine, the contents enter the…

A

large intestine

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16
Q

Function of the Appendix?

A

In the lower Right Abdomen

Function unknown - theory is it stores good bacteria for “Rebooting” the digestive system after illness, or that it is a vestigial organ

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17
Q

Function of the Large Intestine

A

mostly removal of water from contents and formation of stool

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18
Q

Parts of the Large Intestine

A
Cecum
Ascending (Right) Colon
Transverse (Across) Colon
Descending (Left) Colon
Sigmoid Colon (Storage) 
Rectum

It has 6 main parts and is a 6 foot long muscular tube

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19
Q

What is stool consisted of?

A

mostly food debris and bacteria

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20
Q

What is the function of the bacteria/natural flora in our gut and stool?

A

Synthesize vitamins
Process waste products and food particles
protect against harmful bacteria

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21
Q

What is the Rectum?

A

8 inch Chamber connecting colon to the anus

When gas or stool enters, neurological sensors message the brain which decides whether to empty or not - if not, sensation to void temporarily ceases

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22
Q

Things to Ask During An Abdominal Health History?

A
Appetite/Weight Change
Difficulty Swallowing
Food Intolerance
Abdominal Pain/Discomfort (Visceral, parietal, referred pain)
Medications taken/allergic to
A nutritional assessment
Vomiting, Nausea (looks, when, amount, etc)
Bowel Habits (amount, timing, etc)
Past Abdominal history
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23
Q

COLDSPA

A

Acronym to remember what to learn about pain/illness

Characteristics, Onset, Location, Duration, Severity, Pattern, Associated Factors (of the pain)

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24
Q

Visceral Pain

A

Organ pain

Dull, Diffuse Pain

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25
Parietal Pain
Lining Pain Sharp pain
26
Referred Pain
pain felt in an area away from the source of it
27
Important subjective considerations on the Abdominal Health History for Infants/children?
do they breast feed/ what kind of food do they eat? how often do they eat? constipation? abdominal pain/discomfort? weight issues?
28
Important subjective considerations on the Abdominal Health History for Adolescents?
do they regularly eat meals do they exercise their activity levels what is their nutrition like do they have weight issues (ask carefully since they have body image issues)
29
Important subjective considerations on the Abdominal health History for Pregnant women?
Morning sickness (50-70% have it) Heartburn (decrease gastroparesis) constipation
30
Gastroparesis
disease in which the stomach cannot empty itself of food in a normal fashion / delayed gastric emptying (leads to heartburn in people that are pregnant for example)
31
Equipment needed for an Abdominal Assessment?
``` Stethoscope Measuring Tape (Size of Liver) Small Pillow/ Rolled up Blanket Pen Light Marking Pen ```
32
What is the abdominal assessment technique order?
Inspection --> Auscultation --> Percussion --> Palpation this order is because percussion or palpation can stimulate the abdominal intestinal region leading to false results like noises when there would not have normally been any there
33
What side of the bed should you stand at during the abdominal assessment?
the right side
34
Important Pre-Abdominal Assessment points to know.
Stand on the right Provide privacy expose the ENTIRE abdomen Raise the bed for good body mechanics and lower when done If can be tolerated, lower the head of the bed into a supine position - if they cannot do this go semi-fowlers have good lighting relax patient patient needs to void ask about painful areas - examine last watch the patients face warm stethoscope and hands have shortened fingernails distract patient with convo/questions visualize organ locations proceed in correct order explain what you do and why cultural considerations
35
Things to observe during inspection of the abdomen?
1. Contour (Flat, Round, Scaphoid, Protuberant) 2. Symmetry 3. Umbilicus (contour, inflammation, hernia, infection - in newborns consider bleeding and infection) 4. Skin (striae, scars, bruising, lesion, rash, tattoo, pulsations at eye level, hair distribution)
36
Term for Bruising
Ecchymosis
37
Movement seen or Bruits Heard in Epigastric region...
may indicate an aortic aneurism
38
When inspecting abdominal distension what is important to keep in mind on what may be causing it?
7 F's: ``` Flat Flatus Fluid Fetus Feces Fetal Growth Fibroid ```
39
Hernia
when organs squeeze through a spot in muscle, tissue, or skin
40
Important hernia locations (5)
1. epigastric 2. umbilical 3. Inguinal (groin/V-line/pubic bone area) 4. Femoral (thigh) 5. Incisional (out of incision/evisceration)
41
When inspecting the abdomen, you are going to view what regions?
The 4 Quadrants (LRQ --> URQ --> ULQ --> LLQ) Epigastric Region (below xiphoid but above umbilicus) Periumbilical Region (two finger diameter around umbilicus) Pelvic Region
42
What organs are in the RUQ?
``` Gallbladder Liver Duodenum Pancreas Head R Adrenal Gland Portion of R Kidney Some of Ascending/Transverse Colon ```
43
What can pain in the RUQ indicate?
``` Cardio - MI, Angina Pulmonary - Pneumonia GallB - Cholecystitis, Cholelithiasis Hepatic - Hepatitis, Cancer (CA) Intestine - Ulcer, Appendicitis ```
44
Cholelithiasis
Gallbladder stones
45
Cholecystitis
Gallbladder inflammation
46
What organs are in the LUQ?
``` Spleen Left Liver Lobe Stomach Pancreas Body Left Adrenal Gland Portion of Left Kidney Some of Transverse/Descending Colon ```
47
What can pain in the LUQ indicate?
``` Cardio - MI, Angina Pulmonary - PE, Pneumonia Pancreas - Pancreatitis Spleen - Rupture Stomach - GERD, Ulcer, Hiatal Hernia ```
48
What organs are in the RLQ?
``` Ovaries/Uterus (When enlarged) Right Spermatic Cord Ascending Colon Lower part of R Kidney Right Ureter Appendix !!!! Bladder when distended/full ```
49
What organs are in the LLQ?
``` Ovaries/Uterus (when enlarged) Left Spermatic Cord Descending/Sigmoid Colon Left Ureter Bladder when distended/full ```
50
What can pain in the RLQ or LLQ indicate?
Ovary/Uterus - Ectopic Preg., Cyst, Pelvic Inflam Disease Intestines - Perforation, Constipation, Diverticulitis, Hernia Kidney - Nephrolithiasis, Infection Appendix (Right) - Appendicitis
51
Nephrolithiasis
kidney stones
52
Examples of where Referred Pain can occur?
``` Shoulder Scapula Thighs and Genitals Lower Back Umbilical Area ```
53
What can referred pain in shoulder indicate?
Ruptured Spleen Ectopic Pregnancy Pancreatitis Perforated Duodenal Ulcer
54
What can referred pain in the scapula indicate?
Cholecystitis MI Angina Pancreatitis
55
What can referred pain in the thighs or genitals indicate?
Renal issues
56
What can referred pain in the lower back indicate?
Pancreatitis Rectal Lesion Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm
57
What can referred pain in the umbilical area indicate?
Small Intestine Issue Appendix Issue Colon Issue
58
9 Abdominal Regions
(R Hypochondriac)(Epigastric)(L Hypochondriac) (R Lumbar) (Umbilical) (L Lumbar) (R Iliac) (Hypogastric) (L Iliac) (used during palpation and percussion of abdomen)
59
Striae
"Stretch Mark" Can be Violet or a Pearly White color occurs when someone gave birth or had a rapid weight change (like: was obese and lost weight fast)
60
What can cause a protuberant abdomen?
Decreased muscle tone
61
What does an abdominal mass look like?
An area where the stomach protrudes out It may indicate a curable/malignant/benign/painful/non-painful/incurable tumor/mass - needs to be tested
62
Caput Medusae
Issue in the abdomen where superficial blood vessels protrude out due to portal hypertension to appear "snake-like"
63
Ascites
Fluid trapped in the peritoneal cavities (abdomen)
64
What often is the cause of ascites of the abdomen?
Some liver issue like cancer, cirrhosis, etc
65
What area of the abdomen is auscultated first with the warm stethoscope diaphragm?
The Ileocecal Valve
66
Where is the ileocecal valve ?
in the Right Lower Quadrant (where the cecum of the colon is and where the S and L intestines meet)
67
How often do healthy bowel sounds occur?
every 5 to 20 seconds - these are called active bowel sounds
68
Loud and prolonged (borborygmic) bowel sounds are ____
hyperactive
69
If bowel sounds are occurring every 20-30 seconds due to constipation, beginning of ileus, or decreased motility, they are ____
hypoactive
70
In order to declare bowel sounds as ABSENT, how long must you auscultate?
a full 3 to 5 minutes
71
What may cause absent bowel sounds?
Decreased motility due to paralytic ileus, peritonitis, anesthesia (may want to flick abdomen for stimulation) - this is a very serious issue
72
What are active bowel sounds (sound, why they happen, why we assess them)?
Sporadic, irregular high pitched clicks/gurgles due to peristalsis and we listen to them to assess bowel motility
73
What other sound should we auscultate when doing the abdominal assessment?
The vascular sounds of the aorta using the bell this area is the epigastric region / below the xiphoid process and above the umbilicus
74
What is a problematic sound, and what does it indicate, in the epigastric region?
If you hear a systolic bruit that could indicate abdominal aortic aneurysm
75
Why do we percuss the abdomen?
To detect fluid, gaseous distention, masses, and asses position and size of various structures
76
What areas are percussed in an abdominal assessment?
all 4 quadrants or the 9 regions including flank areas of the back (where kidneys are)
77
What is the predominant sound (indicating air) during abdominal percussion?
Tympany
78
What can a dull percussion indicate in abdominal assessments?
locations of organs the liver, a distended bladder, pregnant uterus, fluid, feces, or other solid masses
79
When doing abdominal palpation, what must be done and in what order?
Light Palpation x9 --> Deep Palpation x9 --> Rebound Tenderness
80
Why do light palpation in an abdominal assessment?
check for surface abnormalities, muscle rigidity, and tenderness
81
What is the motion of light and deep palpation?
It is a dipping motion with fingers/palm together and flat the light palp goes about 1-2 cm, while deep goes about 4-6 cm Deep also uses one hand on top of one another, while Light uses only one hand/fingers
82
Why do deep palpation in an abdominal assessment?
check organs (liver, spleen, kidneys, aorta) for masses or other issues
83
If there is tenderness/pain expressed or found in light palpation, then you should ...
NOT do deep palpation
84
Rebound Tenderness
Pressing into the and and releasing quickly to see if pain, grimace, or yelling is elicited If it is, it is a positive sign of some issue
85
Blumberg's Sign
Rebound Tenderness The abdominal wall is compressed slowly and then rapidly released. If there is pain elicited it is a positive sign (indicates something like peritonitis)
86
Obturator Test
Patient lies on back with right hip flexed 90 degrees. Examiner holds patients right ankle in right hand. With left hand examiner rotates hip by moving the right knee to and away from the body. Pain elicited is a positive sign (of appendicitis)
87
Murphy's Sign
Test where the patient is asked to breath out, followed by placing the hand over the gall bladder (R. MCL) - the patient then breaths in Normally, the abdominal contents are pushed down as the diaphragm moves up, but if the patient stops breathing and winces to "catch" their breaths it is a POSITIVE sign of a gall bladder issue
88
Important objective developmental considerations for Infants and Children when doing the abdominal physical assessment?
their first stool (meconium) could still be present in newborns liver takes up more space than an adult the abdominal wall is thinner organs are palpable easier urinary bladder is higher up than in adults contour is often protuberant / pot bellt shape Umbilical Herniation in newborns
89
Important objective developmental considerations for Pregnant Women when doing the abdominal physical assessment?
Hemorrhoid presence Bowel Sounds can be diminished Appendix is displaced up and to the right
90
Important objective developmental considerations for Elders when doing the abdominal physical assessment?
Increased abdominal fat Less musculature Organs may be easier to palpate now
91
-oscopy
test allowing for a test of the GI system a tiny camera is inserted into the area and can visualize the area for the physician
92
What things can an -oscopy procedure due?
Visualize the area Biopsy mucosa and lesions Remove Lesions Cauterize Bleeding
93
Difference between a Colonoscopy and a Sigmoidoscopy?
Colonoscopy examines the entire colon, but the sigmoidoscopy only examines the lower third (sigmoid colon)
94
Contrast Medium Study - Barium Swallow/Enema
The patient NPO after midnight and must understand the procedure and consent. the barium is chalky and could cause stomach irritation, and laxatives may be needed to flush barium afterward The barium swallow, radioactive, can help visualize areas like the esophagus, upper GI, stomach, S intestines A barium enema can help visualize the large intestine
95
BS
Barium Swallow
96
BE
Barium Enema
97
GI Occult Blood Test
Test checking for blood in the stool - if blue, there is a positive for blood present in stool Up to 3 dasys before avoid red meat, raw fruit, vegetables, aspirin, and vitamin C to prevent False Pos/Neg
98
NPO
Non Per Orum - Nothing By Mouth Type of Intake Diet requiring that nothing (not even ice) be eaten prior to surgeries, GI abnormalities, N&V, L&D, some lab work, and when comatose Some health histories may require the use of IV fluids If well nourished, can be tolerated for a short time
99
Important Considerations for NPO
Keep the mouth moist (do not swallow) Practice Good Oral Care They may be grumpy from lack of food/drink
100
Clear Liquid Diet
Any liquid that is see through at room temp (broth, coffee, carbonated beverages, ice pops, gelatin, clear juice, tea) 1st step post-surgery poor nutritional value (long term would need IV sub) "clear Diet, advance as tolerated" means nurses can assess advancement
101
Clear Liquid Diets allow the nurse to ...
assess tolerance to PO intake, and choose advancements in diet
102
Concerning Signs to Be on the Look Out For during Clear Liquid Diets?
Not Voiding Full Feeling Diarrhea Abdominal pain and distention
103
What things do we want the patient to experience before advancing past a clear liquid diet?
Want them to feel hungry Have positive bowel sounds have them pass flatus (sometimes) be able to eat half or three-fourths of their tray before advancing
104
Full Liquid Diet
Includes all of the clear diet plus milk products, frozen deserts/custards/pudding, pasteurized eggs, veggie juices, milk/egg substitutes This has better nutrition than a clear diet so it can be taken for a few days without supplementation
105
Soft Diet
"bland diet" or "Low fiber diet" It is a regular diet to remove food difficult to digest or chew it meets nutritional satisfactory, but it is very tasteless
106
What cannot be given in a soft diet?
No High Fiber Food (salad, roughage) No High Fat Food No Highly Seasoned Food
107
Pureed Diet
Foods (meat, veggies, etc) are blended to a liquid form similar to baby food It is for patients with difficulty chewing, swallowing, facial control/paralysis, or post oral surgery Has nutritional value since foods are blended with broths, gravies, cream soups, cheese, milk, juices to increase calorie and nutritional value
108
Problems with the Pureed Diet
A patient could aspirate on the food if they cannot swallow
109
Mechanical Soft Diet
Diet where food is modified for texture (chopped, ground, pureed) when the patient has difficulty chewing or surgery to the head/neck/mouth Mashed soft ripened fruits and cooked, mashed, soft veggies are common in this diet
110
Regular Diet
"House Diet" Any food is allowed , and patients can generally order what they want depending on the facilities dietary system Issue is aspiration though once again
111
NAS
"No Added Salt" or Sodium Restricted Diet Used for patients with heart disease, hypertension, kidney disease, or ascites
112
I&O
Intake and Output We need to measure what patients consume and what they put out
113
Examples of Intake
By Mouth Foods IV Fluids Antibiotics
114
Examples of Output / 3 Ways Output is Measured
Urine Sweat Stool
115
How is intake and output measured?
Solid intake - percentage taken in Liquid Intake - mL or cc Output - cc or mL for liquids ; weight for solids
116
Important Nursing Considerations on Challenges in Nutrition
``` Impaired Appetite Eating Alone culture Religion Serving Times State of Health Preferences Cognitive Level Cognitive Impairment ```
117
Ways to Stimulate an Appetite in a Patient
Offer small and frequent feedings solicit favorite foods from home when possible provide a pleasant eating environment schedule procedures and meds when they are less likely to interfere with appetite control pain, nausea, depression with meds offer alternatives for items person will not/ cannot eat provide good oral hygiene provide a comfortable position
118
If a patient cannot chew or swallow at all, how may they eat?
Enteral Feedings | Parenteral Feedings
119
Enteral Feedings
Feedings administered directly into the stomach via a tube (ex: OG, NG, PEG)
120
OG Tube stands for ...
Oral Gastric Tube
121
NG Tube stands for ...
Naso Gastric Tube
122
PEG Tube stands for ...
Percutaneous Gastrostomy or Jejunostomy Tube
123
How are enteral feeding tubes named?
based on where they are inserted and then directed
124
NG Tubes
Put in the nose down to the stomach for short term use (< 6 weeks)
125
What is a risk of using an NG tube?
aspiration
126
What does aspiration look like during enteral feedings?
Increased HR, RR Anxiety Auscultated Rhonchi Vomiting up Solution Decreased O2 Sat
127
If rhonchi are still present after coughing, this is an indication of ...
aspiration of solution during enteral feedings
128
Think ____ to help prevent aspiration of NG tube feeding patients
positioning (of the tube and the patient)
129
What position should the patient be in during NG tube feedings and up to an hour after?
High Fowlers or on their Right Side if Comatose
130
Points to consider when doing enteral feedings?
Food at room temp (cold can cause cramps/diarrhea) Aspirate prior to feeding to assess residuals and evaluate last feeding absorption May have to check placement with X Ray (first check) Assess bowel sounds prior to feeding (if absent hold it) Look for dumping syndrome signs Flush tubing with water to maintain fluid balance and patency of tubes
131
A piston syringe residual of greater than 150 for enteral feeding means...
you should contact the physician (it should be 100-150)
132
Enteral Feeding Schedules
Intermittent Bolus Intermittent Continuous Feedings Cyclic Feedings
133
Preferred Enteral Feeding Schedule
Intermittent
134
Intermittent Feeding
300-500 mL of enteral formula administered several times a day (preferred method)
135
Bolus Intermittent Feeding
a bag hanging by gravity or a syringe delivers formula into the stomach - can be fairly quick and therefore may not be tolerated
136
Continuous Feeding
infusion pump administers feedings at a constant flow 24 hours a day. Stomach never gets a rest and patient must be at a 30 degree angle at all times
137
Cyclic Feedings
continuous feedings delivered over less than 24 hours (usually at night)
138
What is the bumper in an enteral feeding tube?
a balloon that inflated to prevent migration out of the stomach
139
Tubes need to be ____ so we do not clog smaller tubes
patent
140
Parenteral Feeding
Deliver nutrients directly into bloodstream - bypassing GI tract used when patients cannot meet nutritional needs orally or enterally yellow fluids are often the solution with white as the lipid/fat contents
141
Solutions present in Parenteral Feeding
``` Dextrose Amino Acids Electrolytes Vitamins Trace Elements in Sterile Water ```
142
What sort of patients need parenteral feedings?
``` Comatose Non functioning GI Tracts Extensive Burns Extensive Surgery Extensive Cancer Treatments Premature Infants ```
143
What is the general duration of parenteral feeding?
less than or equal to 14 days / 2 weeks
144
2 Types of Parenteral Nutrition Solution?
TPN and PPN
145
TPN
Total Parenteral Nutrition Uses a central IV line (like vena cava), since peripheral with this could cause infection or phlebitis It is highly concentrated, hypertonic nutrient solution *Neonates can have this administered in peripheral IV (commonly) or central lines - they often get TPN
146
PPN
Peripheral Parenteral Nutrition Not as nutrient dense as TPN making it less caustic to veins
147
Complications of Parenteral Nutrition
Liver Damage (from lipids) Hyperglycemia (from dextrose) Sepsis (unclean catheter) Phlebitis/Infiltration Central Line Placement Issues (Infection, Catheter Fracture, Clotting)
148
What is important to keep in mind on frequency of BM?
frequency varies person to person and it is not necessary for everyone to have a daily BM
149
Common bowel problems?
``` Diarrhea Fecal Impaction Flatulence Constipation Bowel Incontinence ```
150
What to assess on patient Bowel Elimination?
``` Color Odor (C Diff has a distinct smell) Amount Consistency Frequency ```
151
Contributing Factors for Altered Bowel Function
``` Activity Levels Physiologic Factors Defecation Habits Diagnostic Procedures Anesthesia Pathologic Conditions Pain Medications ```
152
How does activity affect bowel function?
immobility and lack of exercise can lead to weakened abdominal and pelvic muscles
153
Physiologic Factors that can affect bowel function?
Anxiety Depression *they have a response on the enteric nervous system
154
How does anesthesia affect bowel function?
It can slow normal colonic movement by influencing the ileus
155
Example of a Pathologic Condition that can alter bowel function?
a spinal cord injury
156
How do medications affect bowel function?
A drug may increase or decrease GI motility and influence appearance of stool Also, habitual laxative use will inhibit natural defecation reflexes and cause more constipation
157
Ostomy
Surgically formed opening from the inside of an organ to the outside of the body - the intestinal mucosa is brought to the abdominal wall, and a STOMA is formed by suturing the mucosa to the skin
158
What is the consistency of ostomy excrement?
depends on its location
159
Ileostomy content consistency is ..
liquid form since it is from the ileum of the small intestine
160
Colostomy content consistency is ..
formed, but depends on location: Ascending colon is both liquid and formed Transverse colon is more formed than liquid Descending and Sigmoid should be formed
161
Why is a colostomy needed?
Bowel is blocked or perforated Portion of bowel has been removed d/t cancer Trauma
162
Is an ostomy permanent or temporary?
both Temporary allows the bowel to heal and permanent occurs fi rectal cancer or a portion of the GI tract was removed
163
How many stomas are in a temporary ostomy?
2 because they will eventually be refused by surgery
164
When assessing a stoma/ostomy, a healthy stoma is ...
Bright red or dark, pink and moist has minimal bleeding size stabilized after 6-8 weeks protrude about .5 to 1 inch from the abdominal surface
165
A pale stoma indicates...
anemia
166
Dark Purple / Blue Stoma indicates ...
ischemia or compromised circulation
167
Stoma Nursing Interventions
Try to limit odors as much as possible Keep skin around the peristomal area clean and dry Measure I&O properly Educate and explain to help get them through it Encourage patient to participate in care and look at the ostomy
168
Enemas
A solution put into the rectum and large intestine to distend the intestines and maybe irritate intestinal mucosa to cause increased peristalsis and expulsion of feces and flatus (lube causes explosive defecation)
169
Purpose of Enemas
To relieve constipation or fecal impaction Promote Visualization of intestinal tract during X ray Prevent the escape of feces during surgery treat parasites and worm infestations
170
Types of Enemas
Cleansing Retention Carminative Return-Flow
171
How to administer an enema?
Sims position on Left Side so the fluid flows down the sigmoid colon on left side --> raise solution to increase flow force slowly --> if there is pain or cramping clamp the tube for 30 s and restart even slower --> instruct client to hold 10-15 minutes unless a bowel movement was the purpose ---> have bedpan/commode ready --> document
172
Nursing Interventions to Promote Bowel Elimination
Goal to Promote Regular Defecation Provide Privacy Schedule Lots of Fluids and fiber Provide as normal a position as possible when using bedpan Milk of Magnesia --> Suppositories' --> Enema
173
What parts are included in an integumentary assessment?
Skin Hair and Scalp Nail
174
The skin is the ____ organ, and the most ____
largest, neglected
175
The skin accounts for around ___% of your body weight
15 %
176
The average person has ___ ____ skin cells
300 million
177
Your skin hosts around ____ types of bacteria
1000
178
More than half the dust in your home is...
actually dead skin
179
The skin renews every ...
28 days
180
Functions of the integumentary system?
Offers Protection (against organisms/weather/etc) Thermoregulation (subcut. fat allows) Alerts the Sensory System (pain, heat, etc) Metabolizes Vitamin D Affects communication and Identification (people or texture of things)
181
The integumentary system is deeply entwined in the ____ system
neuro
182
Epidermis
First Skin Layer Melanocytes (color) Provides a Barrier Thin (5 layers to it) Acidic pH and has a Lipid Layer to ward off organisms and moisturize/protect Visible
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Why are skin washing products so important to think about in the hospital?
You do not want to wash off the acidic pH of the epidermis and weaken protection
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Dermis
"The Working Layer" below epidemis Hair Follicles, Capillaries, Sweat Glands, Nerve Ends Most Dense layer of Skin (2 layers to it) Fibroblasts here release collagen and elastin Important to immunity, nutrition, skin repair, heat regulation, equilibrium maintenance
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Basement Membrane
zone dividing the epidermis and dermis as this membrane degrades with age, the skin becomes less supple, intact, or elastic
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Collagen
Protein released by dermis fibroblasts helps in the strengthening of the skin
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Elastin
protein released by dermis fibroblasts helps pull skin back into place / provide elasticity
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Subcutaneous Tissue
"Hypodermis" / Below Dermis Layer between skin and structures like bone, muscle, tendon Acts as an insulator and pressure redistributor Not every area has / has little subcutaneous tissue
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If there is not much subcutaneous tissue in an area, what may occur?
In areas like the ear pinna, bridge of nose, and heel there is little protection and pressure redistribution so skin breakdown can occur more easily here
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Perfect Wound Healing Trajectory?
Hemostasis --> Inflammation --> Proliferation --> Tissue Remodeling
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Hemostasis
First stage of wound healing body forms a clot almost immediately can be influenced by age and blood thinners
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Inflammation
Second stage of wound healing blood vessels have clot, and then WBC immediately come and macrophages eat away at bacteria - rescue and fight inflammation helps healing without allowing infection Sometimes suturing or cleaning out the wound occurs here
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Proliferation
Third stage of wound healing body heals from the inside out epidermal injuries proliferate and heal faster comorbidities may cause becoming stuck and this and the inflammation stage without progression, and thus needing intervention
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Tissue Remodeling
Final and Fourth stage of wound healing where the body keeps closing the wound inside out
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What is a big influence on wound healing?
comorbidities
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In what direction does the body heal skin?
From Inside Outward
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What kind of skin injury heals quickest?
Epidermal
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Full Thickness Wound
A wound that goes down into the dermal layer and takes longer to heal than an epidermal injury
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A wound is ____ not ____
closed not healed Healing means it wont occur again its over, but closing means theres still remodeling occurring
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Wound Closure
Primary, Secondary, Tertiary Intention
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Primary Intention
Wound closure from something like sutures or medical intervention
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Secondary Intention
wound closure that occurs by letting normal body processes occur
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Tertiary (Delayed Closure) Intention
Dirty wound is allowed to be open and heal naturally for a time with cleaning products used, and eventually it will be surgically closed ex: Fasciotomy
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Factors that can affect wound healing ?
Comorbidities: Circulation impairment Hyperglycemia (too much sugar means the wound will not want to close) Tobacco Use Poor Nutrition (lack of vitamins, proteins, calories will slow down the process) Spinal Cord injury Infections Dying process (blood is diverted to vital organs so skin is neglected)
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Nurses are responsible for taking care of the patient's (potentially neglected) ____
skin!
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How long should a skin assessment take?
5 minutes or less
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What is the skin assessment technique order?
Interview, Inspection, Palpation
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What doing the skin assessment it is important to know what 2 things?
1. Patients and caregivers are best info sources | 2. Ask questions to get the full picture
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Pressure point Areas
Areas that pressure wounds/wounds are more likely to occur Buttocks > Heels > Elsewhere
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Skin Inspection
Check skin for: Tone based on ethnicity Pigmentation Color changes lesions rashes infections hygiene issues
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If you can, it is better to do what during skin assessments?
Do it without gloves
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Skin Palpation
Touch the skin: open or closed? hot or cold? erythema? infection? hydration: cracked, scaly, turgor Inflammation, edema, rashes moisture of skin: diaphoretic, oily, dry
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What is the next step after skin palpation?
Hair and Scalp Assessment
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Hair and Scalp Assessment
Inspect hair and scalp: presence or absence of hair infections infestations with things like lice and nits dry hair, dry scalp
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What is the next step after hair and scalp assessment?
Nail Assessment
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Nail Assessment
Inspect Nails: condition infections trimming/grooming ability color of nailbeds capillary refill dry, brittle, cracked, clubbing?
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What may clubbed nails be an indicator of?
COPD, sickle cell, cystic fibrosis, anemia
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What to look at when assessing a wound?
First: ASSESS WHOLE PATIENT (holistically) Etiology/location wound bed color drainage amount and color (COCA/REEDA) Odor size periwound condition pain
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Wound assessments need you to first assess the whole patient, what does this mean?
Assess them holistically: spiritually, physically, psychologically, etc Use the science AND THE ART of nursing
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REEDA
Wound assessment mnemonic ``` Red Ecchymosis Edema Drainage Approximation ```
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COCA
Wound drainage mnemonic Color Odor Consistency Amount
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Drainage Types
Serous Serosanguinous Sanguineous
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Serous Drainage
Clear stick fluid / light yellow (seen near end of wound healing)
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Serosanguinous Drainage
Slightly bloody/pink mixed with some serous drainage near mid to late healing
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Sanguineous
Bloody Drainage
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Braden Scale
Pressure ulcer risk predictor score with 6 categories
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6 Braden Scale Categories
``` Sensory Perception Moisture Activity Mobility Friction and Shear Nutrition ```
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The lower the Braden scale score...
the higher the risk of pressure ulcer (18 or less is high risk)
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Slough
light yellow wound area that can probably be cleaned off
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Granulation Tissue
red healthy tissue indicative of healing
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Eschar
black wound made of necrotic dry tissue that may need debridement or natural sloughing off
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Maceration
break down of skin due to too much moisture
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How to measure a wound?
Length is cephalocaudal direction in cm Width is hip to hip direction in cm Depth is from the deepest part in cm Tunnels need depth in cm and clock direction Undermining needs start and stop direction in clock direction
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Tunnelling
A deeper wound that "tunnels" under the skin and must be measured in cm and referred to by clock direction
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Undermining
Areas where the wound bed are wider than the peri wound and need to be measured according to clock direction
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Potential Wound Complications?
``` In Hospital: Poor Drainage Management Wound Healing Stalled S/S of Infection present in wound or systemic Wound Pain ``` ``` In community: Patient goals change Patient does not follow care plan Treatment expensive No caregiver to help with wound care Comorbid conditions not well controlled ```
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Ways to Manage Wound complications?
Notify the Provider Request Specialist Consult Wound Culture/Blood Work Antibiotic Therapy when Infected Teach pain management Communicate with patient to address concerns Include patient in plan of care Social workers may be needed to address financial or caregiver concerns Dietician consultation
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Pressure Ulcers/Injury
"Cubuteous Ulcers" / "Bed Sores" - Now called pressure injuries A bottoms up skin injury (not surface) rated as a stage I to IV scale, unstageable, or deep tissue pressure injury
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Pressure Injuries are ___ ___
bottoms up
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Stage I Pressure Injury
Non blanchable area of erythema over a bony prominence (stays red when blanched - wont turn white)
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Stage II Pressure Injury
Partial thickness skin loss with the dermis now present visibly Pink/red wound bed or serous filled blister fat, granulation, slough, or eschar ARE NOT PRESENT due to shearing/external forces
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Stage III Pressure Injury
Full thickness skin loss, adipose tissue present, nonviable tissue may also be present Supporting structures ARE NOT PRESENT may have tunneling or undermining Epithelial tissue growth may not return to normal color CAN HAVE granulation, slough, non viable tissue present unlike stage II
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Stage IV Pressure Injury
Full thickness skin loss with the supporting structures (bone, tendon, muscle, fascia) present/visible
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Unstageable Pressure injury
Full thickness wound that cannot be staged since it is covered by nonviable slough tissue or eschar must be unroofed to determine
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Deep tissue injury
Area of intact or nonintact skin with area of NON BLANCHABLE deep red, maroon, or purple discoloration may also be a blood filled blister
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Venous Ulcers / Lymphedema in regards to Healthcare settings
80% of all lower limb wounds, reoccurs very commonly, and costs 2 billion annually hard to treat may need lifelong compression
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CVI stands for
Chronic Venous Insufficiency (Venous Ulcers)
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Etiology of Venous Ulcers
High pressure in lower leg vessels Decreased venous return Damage to valves Vein distention and obstruction venous stasis (hard to return blood to heart)
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S/S of CVI and Venous Wounds
Lower Limb Edema (pulses felt if not) Dry Scaly Skin Sensitive Skin Itchy Skin Maceration Hemosiderin Staining Varicosities Lipodermatosclerosis (lower leg skin changes) Wounds located in medial limb (calf), and gaiter area Irregular Wound Borders LARGE amount of exudate Feet are warm/pink Can be painful Leg takes on an upside down / bottleneck shape
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Hemosiderin Staining
Venous ulceration occurring with a red/purple color
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Venous Ulcers/CVI may require...
lifelong compression that is difficult to maintain
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Lymphedema etiology
Edema in Lymph: Trauma to area Radiation cancer vessel infections
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Lymphedema is often ...
unilateral (because circulation is broke by a disease on one side)
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Lipedema
symmetric enlargement of legs due to fat deposits in obesity
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Treatment of Lymphedema?
massage and compression for life (but venous ulcers mostly take compression)
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Arterial Ulcer
Limited or no arterial blood flow feeding lower limbs leading to ischemia which causes ulceration and bad healing
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Etiology of Arterial Ulcers
Major cause - Tobacco Use Others: Diabetes, Raynaud's, HTN, Auto Immune Disease
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Arterial Ulcer and Ischemia Characteristics
Punched out appearance defined borders typically unhealthy wound bed colors (yellow, brown, black) often infected with minimal drainage often present on distal toes, ankles, feet pedal pulses nonpalpable or faint feet may be dusky or cool to the touch toe nail fungus often present lack of hair growth on limbs necrosis may be present very painful ulcers complain of intermittent claudication (walking pain) and pain with leg elevation
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Lower Extremity Neuropathic Disease (LEND)
Disease leading to neuropathic ulcers from various conditions, most commonly diabetes
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Etiology/Causes of Neuropathic Ulcers
Most Commonly: Diabetes Other: Kidney disease, traumatic spinal cord/nerve injury, infection, vitamin deficiency, medications, chemotherapy It is due to perfusion impairment contributing to damage of the nerves to the extremities
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Most common type of neuropathic ulcer
Diabetic Foot Ulcers
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Sensory neuropathy pathology of Neuropathic Ulceration
Paresthesia Loss of sensation, recognition, balance Risk of falls
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Paresthesia
loss of the ability to feel
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Motor neuropathy pathology of Neuropathic Ulceration
Foot Deformities Changes in Gait / Autonomic Neuropathy Sweat Gland Regulation - cracks, fissures in skin occur Bone changes - osteopenia, fractures Charcot Foot
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Neuropathic Ulcers are typically on what surface?
Plantar surface where a boney issue is underneath (often where someone stepped on something or a shoe rubbed it)
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Charcot foot
condition causing the weakening of the foot bones occurring in people with significant nerve damage (neuropathy)
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Diabetic foot ulcers increase risk of ...
Amputation significantly, which leads to a drastic increase in mortality rate
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Surgical Wounds
incisions made purposefully by a professional and are cut precisely, creating clean edges around the wound, and then often closed by primary intention
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Why might a surgical wound be left open to heal by tertiary intention?
to allow better granulation tissue formation depending on wound characteristics and the reasoning behind the surgical intervention
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Clean Surgical Wound
Non-contaminated surgical wound Performed in operating room which is a sterile environment can be left opened or closed
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Contaminated Surgical Wound
wound without infection, but at high risk for infection high microorganism load occurred
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Dirty Surgical Wound
Surgical wound done in a dirty/non-sterile area with high risk of infection and infection probably already present
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MASD
Moisture Associated Skin Damage Often forgotten, but needs management It is the inflammation of the epidermis from exposure to urine, stool, sweat, drainage over time The skin is saturated, injured, and susceptible to disease/breaking Can be difficult to treat, and moisture must be managed
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Palliative Wound Care
approach of wound care on relieving suffering and improving QOL when curing is difficult/impossible one of the most challenging areas, with long term wounds difficult to heal Patient MAY be on end of life care
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Palliative Wound Care Goals
What is most concerning to patient? What are the patient/caregiver willing to do? What are the comorbid factors/prognosis involved? We want to know what is most concerning to the patient and caregiver and be on the same page of treatment, be inline with them and not gung-ho about it
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What symptoms may be most problematic for a patient in palliative wound care?
``` Odor Pain Drainage Management Location Emotional Problems ```
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Kennedy terminal ulcer
Wound requiring palliative care/palliative wound Sudden onset of a deep purple/maroon color over an area like the sacrococcygeal/ischium It is butterfly/pear shaped with irregular borders and progresses rapidly it often indicates the patient as being near death
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Gangrenous Ulcers and Weepy Edema
Palliative Care Wounds Often indicate the patient is at end of life Gangrenous appears as crusty and blackened on lower limbs, and weepy edema has pitting edema with fluid leaking out
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Malignant Lesions
"Fungating Lesions" Type of Palliative care wound It is cancer that breaks through the skin Offensive odor Very Painful Drainage is excessive because it is very vascularized and bleeds easily Common in hospitce populations
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What is important to critical thinking when dealing with malignant lesions?
1. We need a dressing that wont stick or cause more damage/bleeding 2. We need to understand the patients problem and get creative in covering them up so they can be part of the community in their final time
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Overall, when managing wounds it is important to do what?
GO BACK TO THE ASSESSMENT AND GOALS everyone should be on the same page during treatment
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Dehisced
wound surgically created that has opened back up
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Evisceration
when bowel comes out of a wound that has opened up on the anterior/abdomen - it is a surgical emergency since pinching can occur leading to loss of blood flow and necrosis followed by sepsis and death
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Herniation
bowel comes through the muscle layer, but not all the way out like in evisceration