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Nursing Care and Procedures. Michael Lavoie, B.S. Middlesex Community College Veterinary Assistant Program March 2012. Common Abbreviations in the Vet Field. Ab antibody AD right ear AS left ear AU both ears ACL anterior cruciate ligament ad lib as much as desired ag antigen
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Nursing Care and Procedures Michael Lavoie, B.S. Middlesex Community College Veterinary Assistant Program March 2012
Common Abbreviations in the Vet Field • Ab antibody • AD right ear • AS left ear • AU both ears • ACL anterior cruciate ligament • ad lib as much as desired • ag antigen • ant. anterior • AP anterior posterior • bid twice a day (can also be written q12hrs)
Continued… • BP blood pressure • BW body weight • ºC degree Celsius (centigrade) • Ca calcium • cal calorie(s) • cc cubic centimeter • CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention • CF cardiac failure
Continued… • CHF congestive heart failure • CNS central nervous system • CPR cardiopulmonary resuscitation • CSF cerebrospinal fluid • DEA Drug Enforcement Agency • DJD degenerative joint disease • dL deciliter(s) • DM diabetes mellitus
Continued… • dx diagnosis • ECG electrocardiogram • EFA essential fatty acids • eg for example • EKG electrocardiogram • ºF degree Fahrenheit • FDA Food and Drug Administration
Continued… • FeLV feline leukemia virus • FIP feline infectious peritonitis • FIV feline immunodeficiency virus • FLUTD feline lower urinary tract disease • FUO fever of undetermined origin • fx fracture • g gram(s) • GDV gastric dilatation and volvulus GI gastrointestinal • gr grain(s)
Continued… • hr hour(s) • IBD inflammatory bowel disease • IC intracardiac • IM intramuscular(ly) • IN intranasal • IV intravenous(ly) • IVD intervertebral disc
Continued… • kg kilogram(s) • L liter(s) • lat. Lateral • lb pounds (may be written #) • LPF low-power field • m meter(s) • mEq milliequivalent(s) • µg microgram • mg milligram(s)
Continued • min minute(s) • mL milliliter(s) • MLV modified live virus • mm millimeter(s) • mo month(s) • MRI magnetic resonance imaging • NAF no abnormalities found • NSAIDS non-steroidal anti-inflammatories • O2 oxygen
Continued • OD right eye • OS left eye • OU both eyes • OTC over the counter • oz ounce(s) • PCV packed cell volume • PE physical exam • plt platelet • PO per os • PRN as required • qid four times daily q4h every 4 hours
qod every other day • RBC red blood cell(s) • rx treatment, prescription • SC subcutaneous(ly) • Sub Q subcutaneous(ly) • sx surgery • tid three times daily, q8hrs • UTI urinary tract infection • VD ventral dorsal • WBC white blood cell • wk week(s) • wt weight • yr year(s)
Sterilization • Process of killing all living organisms on a surface • Treatment area • Exam rooms • Surgical suites • Several classifications
Cold Sterilization • Process of soaking items in a disinfectant chemical until they are cleansed for reuse • Cold trays hold a chemical that acts as a sterilizing agent • Items that are used often and require a simple and quick sanitation method • Brushes, nail clippers, some instruments • Endotracheal tubes
Dry heat or incineration • Use of flame by exposing an item to extreme heat or through incineration • Incinerator- used to burn the remains of items that have the potential to spread disease • Incineration- necessary with biological hazards, medical wastes, and animal remains • Requires the items to be burned to ashes to prevent the spread of disease
Autoclave • Sterilizes items, especially surgical equipment • Autoclave- piece of equipment in the form of a sealed chamber • Objects are exposed to heat and steam under pressure at extremely hot temperatures to kill living organisms • Special preparation of instruments requires- different layers to protect instruments and self life • Indicator tape.
Radiation and ultrasound • Another method of sterilization • Radiation- use of ultraviolet or gamma rays that radiate and kill living organisms • Ultrasound- passage of high frequency sound waves through a solution to create a vibration that scrubs an item to remove debris • Ultrasonic cleaner- machine where items soak in a solution that vibrates and remove dirt and debris • Used primarily for surgical instruments/equipment • Done prior to packing instruments for autoclaving • Part of the cleaning process
Filtration • Method of sanitation • Remove particles from the air using a physical barrier • Common in lab areas, research facilities • Usually entails a separate room that is entered prior to entering the area where animals are housed or contained • Pressurized room that prevents organisms from entering a facility • Sterile clothing and personal protective equipment (PPE)
Sanitation • Involves cleaning and disinfecting the veterinary facility • Controls the direct spread of organisms on surfaces, in the air and on other objects within the facility • Employees must follow standard sanitation procedures and policies • Failure- harm to patients, loss of clients, decrease in revenue, loss of jobs • Awareness of potential transmission of diseases from patient to patient and patient to people
Sanitation chemicals and cleaners • Handle with care • Some have harmful vapors • Can cause burns • Always read the label or MSDS (material safety data sheet) • Proper dilution • Wear gloves, goggles • Specific chemicals for specific areas
Remember… • 1 teaspoon= 5 mL • 1 tablespoon= 15 mL • 1 ounce= 30 mL
Antiseptics • Solutions that destroy microorganisms or inhibit their growth on living tissue • Effective disinfecting agents • Variety of properties that alter their uses and effectiveness • Spectrum of activity- what the agent will kill • Concentration of the solution- strength of the solution • Contact time- how long the disinfectant should sit • Appropriate surface uses • Inhibiting factors- uses that should be avoided • Toxic effects- hazardous effects the agent may have to humans or animals
Types/names • Chlorhexidine solution- disinfectant • Chlorhexidine scrub- disinfectant and antiseptic • Bleach- cleaner and disinfectant • Alcohol- disinfectant and antiseptic • Hydrogen peroxide- antiseptic • Betadine/iodine- disinfectant and antiseptic • Formaldehyde- disinfectant
Hand Hygiene • Handwashing • Most common method of spreading disease- direct hand contact • Sneezing • Coughing • Restrooms • Touching or handling each animal • Money • Direct contact with people • Phones • Door handles
Proper hand washing • Antibacterial soap and use water or hand sanitizer • Avoid wearing jewelry, fake nails, long nails • Post reminder signs • Moisturizers at wash stations
Exam Room Santiation • Important part of safety and disease control • Include rooms, tools, equipment and supplies • All staff members understand and practice • Clean after every patient • Clean from top to bottom, dry to wet areas, sweep up hair and debris • Use up and down and side to side motions • Empty trash • Place items in sharps containers • Cold tray • Mop bucket- change water and mop head often
Antiseptic techniques • Most important principle in veterinary hospital • Practice of keeping a sterile environment and keeping the environment disease and contaminant free • Especially vital in the surgical suites • Governs how the facility is cleaned, how equipment and instruments are cleaned, and how sugical and medical procedures are preformed • A break in technique leads to possible infection, disease, and potential patient death
Sterile techniques • Changing of all surfaces with disinfectants to prevent spread of disease • Glove wearing- animals and possible contaminants • Frequent hand washing
Nosocomial infections • A human causes disease and or contamination of an animal • Unsterile surgical practices • Allowing contagious animals to contact healthy animals • Contamination of a health animal due to unsafe sterile practices with hands or equipment not being cleansed
Veterinary Assisting • Similar to nursing care in human patients • A service and trained area essential to caring for and preventing illness and disease in hospitalized patients • Essential to the health of the patients • Team effort • Dental care, monitoring IV fluids and catheters, providing injections for the health of the patient, understand the needs and process of euthanasia
Dental Care • Essential part of veterinary medicine and patient care • Small animals, large animals and pocket pets • teeth brushing • Preventative dental care • Client education • Monitoring young animals for proper tooth eruption • Should be part of a yearly exam
Daily dental care • Feed a hard, dry diet • Hard treats • Dental toys or bones • Teeth brushing- proper method and necessary toold and supplies • No human toothpaste- non-digestible enzymes
Daily dental care- continued • Dentifrices- toothpaste • Variety of flavors • Safe, digestible enzymes that can easily be broken down in the animal’s body • Fish, malt, beef, poultry • Humans vs. pet toothbrushes • Needs to fit the size and shape of the animal • Pet toothbrushes- small round head, soft bristles, short narrow handle- fits comfortable into the mouth of an animal • Fingerbrush- small tool that fits on the end of the finger, thimble-like device
The brushing procedure • Similar to brushing one’s own teeth • Only the buccal, labial, and occlusion surfaces in animals • Buccal- the surface of the teeth, located on the outer area near the cheek • Labial- surface of the teeth in the front covered by the lips • Occlusal- top of the teeth
Some things to consider • It is not safe to open an animal’s mouth to brush the inside surfaces of the teeth • Injuries may be caused • Most areas are easily accessed by lifting the lips to expose the outer tooth surface • Be patient- takes time and consistency for an animal to accept • Begin with small amounts of toothpaste on the tip of your finger; allow animal to smell +/- taste
Other considerations • Start with your finger and then work your way up to the tooth brush • Hold the tooth brush at a 45 degree angle over the tooth • Brush in a circular pattern • Brush all teeth • Introduce at a young age • Sample kits, models, encouragement to owners • Want a pleasurable experience!
Dental prophylaxis • Professional cleaning by a scaling and polishing the teeth • May need to be done once a year or more • Considerations- health, age, and breed of patients • Large animals- floating • Prevents sharp edges from forming- difficulty eating • Advanced technique that requires training and experience
Dental prophylaxis- continued • Provided by the technician • Some participation by assistance • Involves general anesthesia • Technician scales all surfaces of the upper and lower dental arcade; polishes all tooth surfaces • Veterinarian checks any diseased areas or extracts teeth • Complete dental exam performed • Damaged teeth • Broken teeth • Gingivitis • Missing teeth • Excessive plaque
Socialization of patients • Provide positive social interaction to all hospitalized patients during treatments, cage cleaning, and/or exercise • Talk to the animals • Pet the animals • Hold them • Use a gentle and soothing voice • Most patients are accustomed to human interaction • Put patients at ease
Exercise of patients • Provided to hospitalized patients if able • Important part of their recovery and treatment • Important for elimination • Walk outside in a designated and safe area • Use appropriate leashes • Proper sanitation methods • Time outside varies from patient to patient
Humane euthanasia • Euthanasia is the process of putting an animal to sleep using humane methods by means of a painless death • Way to end an animals suffering • Decision based on personal beliefs, religious beliefs, and previous experiences • Veterinarian guidance and recommendations • Difficult for owners as well as the veterinary staff
Process of euthanasia • As pain free and stress free as possible • Staff should be supportive and sympathetic to owner’s needs and values • Maintain client confidentiality • Clients signs a waiver • Discuss the procedure and process of events with clients • Determine what the owner would like done with the remains
Process- continued • Will the client be present? • Would the client like to pay before? • Complete all the necessary paperwork before the procedure is done • Inform a client of any legal restrictions for private/home burial • Determine how the client would like to care for the animal’s remains • Pet cemetery for burial • Private cremation • Group cremation
Things to consider • A warm exam room or garden • Tissues • Keep things out of sight • +/- use of sedatives, IV catheters • Label remains accurately!
After the euthanasia • Patient’s body will relax completely • May have agonal response • Gasps of breath while the respiratory system shuts down • May be cyanotic • Lose control of bladder and bowels • Owners may want time alone after the process- keep private • Owner may want the pets collar, hair or paw prints • Reactions are variable
After the euthanasia • Be respectful of the remains • Treat professionally • Place in a cadaver bag • Label the bag with an ID tag- “be accurate” • Place in appropriate area of facility or package for owner • Cardboard coffins, sheets, waterproof • Clean or disinfect exam room or area as needed • Ensure all controlled drugs and substances are recorded