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Care Of The Patient With Respiratory/ Oxygen Needs. Presented by Moyette Graham R.N., B.S.N. ABGs- Arterial Blood Gases. Assess Oxygen status Invasive. Wait longer for results. ABG Values. The arterial blood gas provides the following values: Ph The normal range is 7.35 to 7.45 PO2
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Care Of The Patient With Respiratory/ Oxygen Needs Presented by Moyette Graham R.N., B.S.N
ABGs- Arterial Blood Gases • Assess Oxygen status • Invasive. • Wait longer for results
ABG Values • The arterial blood gas provides the following values: • Ph • The normal range is 7.35 to 7.45 • PO2 • The normal range is 80 to 100 mm Hg. • SaO2 • The normal range is 95% to 100%. • pCO2 • The normal range is 35 to 45 mm Hg. • HCO3 • The normal range is 22 to 26 mEq/liter • B.E. • The normal range is -2 to +2 mEq/liter. • www.orlandohealth.com/MediaBank/.../2010%20ABG%20SLP.pd
Diagnostic Test • Bronchoscopy- pg. 481 FON • C&S Sputum pg. 501 FON Skill 19-9 and 10 • Thoracenthesis- FON pg.. 492
Oxygen therapy • Is the administration of supplemental oxygen to a patient to prevent or relieve hypoxia • Requires doctors order • Dangers • Costly
Characteristics of Oxygen • Tasteless, colorless, odorless • gas essential to life • 21% of the atmospheric air
Disadvantage of use • Flammable • Drying
Symptoms Of Oxygen Deficit • Will vary according to the degree of oxygen deficit • See text page 556 box 20-7
Safety Measures • Post a “no smoking oxygen in use” sign on pt.'s door or at foot of bed • Avoid materials that generate static electricity such as woolen blanket and synthetic fabrics. (wear cotton fabrics) • Avoid flammable materials such as oils, greases, alcohol, ether, nail polish remover etc. See text! Page 559
Nursing measures • Give the amount prescribed by physician; giving too much may lead to oxygen toxicity • Will be prescribed in specific concentration methods and liter flow per minute (L/min) • Nurses may initiate oxygen therapy as an emergency measure
Cont.… • Add a humidifying device to prevent drying of the tissues • Give frequent mouth care • Position carefully; do not block outlet in mask, or allow pt. to slump down in bed or chair • TCDB prevents Hypostatic Pneumonia
Cont. • Remove and clean nasal cannula prn and check nares for irritation • Monitor activities, space them and provide periods of rest • Take temperature measurements by another route so that an oral thermometer does not impair the patient’s breathing
Oxygen Delivery System & Equipment • Nasal Cannula (FON pg.. 557-559) • Face Mask • Venturi Mask • Non-rebreather • Pulse Oximetry
AMBU- Air Mask Bag Unit • Resuscitator bag used to assist respiratory ventilation.
Triflow / Incentive Spirometry • Used Post –OP • Not an oxygen delivery system • Improve ventilation
Mobilization of Pulmonary Secretions • TCBD – Turn, Cough and deep breathe 1) Encourage post-op 2) Teach Splinting • Humidification and Hydration • Thin secretions • Moist Airway
Nebulizer or aerosol therapy • Purposes • Relief of edema and spasms • Liquefaction of bronchial secretions • Delivery of medications or liquefying medications in a fine spray or mist ( bronchodilators) • Humidification of respiratory mucosa • Best used in the morning or 45-60 mins before eating
IPPB-Intermittent Positive Pressure Breathing • Ventilating machine • Allows for even distribution of air to the alveoli • Aids in removal of CO2 • Makes coughing more effective • Loosens and thins secretions in the lower resp. tract
C-PAP • Make sure there is a tight seal so pt. gets maximum benefit
Chest physiotherapy (CPT) • Combination of therapies used to mobilize secretions.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqWvolJ0c6Q • Vibration • Chest percussion • Uses a cupping motion of the hands and alternately striking the area of the lung to be drained
Postural Drainage • Mobilize drainage-Position patient Nursing care • Do not do procedure after meals. Pt. may aspirate • Observe pt.'s tolerance to procedure • Assess lung sounds before, during and after
Tracheostomy- Indications • Airway- Surgical • May be permanent or temporary • Obstruction • Apnea • Altered consciousness
Parts of a trach tube • Outer cannula • Inner cannula • Obturator • Cuffed Tubes, uncuffed or fenestrated tubes
Nursing care • Maintain patent airway • Provide humidification • Prevent infection • Secure trach tube in stoma • Provide a means of communication
Suctioning-Precautions • Position in semi-high fowlers to promote lung expansion • Prevent introduction of pathogen in respiratory tract • Use disposable sets if possible • Hyper-oxygenate with 100% O2 before suctioning • Encourage deep breathing and coughing exercises if possible
Chest Tubes: Reasons for a chest tube • Removal of air or fluid from the chest cavity • Commonly used after chest surgery or trauma • Commonly used to relieve pneumothorax and /or hemothorax
The chest and abdominal cavities are opened here at autopsy. Pictures
bloody fluid filling the right chest cavity as a consequence of trauma. This is a hemothorax.
Filled with a cloudy yellowish-tan fluid, characteristic for a chylothorax. The right lung is markedly atelectatic.
Types • One bottle system-receives both fluid / air • Two bottle system- fluid/ air, creates a water seal • Three bottle system- (Pleur-evac, Atrium) • A- collection chamber • B- water seal chamber • C- suction control chamber
Bubble, Bubble Patient in Trouble…Nursing care • Discuss “POTS” handout