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Assessing Clients with Skin Disorders. Chapter 44. Integumentary System. Functions 1. Protects body from injury 2. Provides a barrier to loss of fluids 3. Sensory - touch, pressure,pain, and temperature 4. Regulates body temperature via sweat glands
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Assessing Clients with Skin Disorders Chapter 44
Integumentary System • Functions • 1. Protects body from injury • 2. Provides a barrier to loss of fluids • 3. Sensory - touch, pressure,pain, and temperature • 4. Regulates body temperature via sweat glands • 5. Production of vitamin D
Skin • 2 Layers • Epidermis • outer layer, protection, stores melanin • epithelial cells • Dermis • inner layer, temperature regulation • connective tissue, contains hair follicle, sweat glands and sebaceous glands
Skin Color • 1. Erythema • reddening of the skin • fever, inflammation, sunburn, drug reaction • 2. Cyanosis • bluish discoloration • poor oxygenation of hemoglobin
Skin Color • 3. Pallor • paleness of skin • shock, fear, anemia or hypoxia • 4. Jaundice • yellow-to-orange skin color • hepatic disorders
3 Types • Sebaceous - Oil • to soften and lubricate the skin • Sudoriferous - Sweat • to regulate body temperature by excretion of sweat • Ceruminous - located in external ear canal • secrete cerumen, sticky trap for foreign materials
The Hair and Nails • Protective Function • Hair • cushions the scalp • eyelashes and eyebrows protect the eyes • provides insulation in cold weather • Nails • protects fingers, toes, aid grasping
The Health Assessment Interview • Determine problems with the integumentary system • “Describe any skin problems or injuries, nail problems or scalp problems you have had.” • “Is your skin and/or scalp dry or oily?” • “Do you have any skin pain, burning or itching?”
The Physical Assessment • Can be part of head-to-toe or focused assessment • Assessment through inspection and palpation • Assess for • color, lesions, temperature,texture, moisture, turgor and edema
The Physical Assessment • Inspect color • pallor • cyanosis • jaundice • Inspect for lesions • irregular skin, rash, hives, psoriasis - scaly red patches
The Physical Assessment • Palpate the skin for temperature • warm with fever • cool in shock or decreased blood flow • Palpate skin for texture • smooth or coarse • Palpate skin for moisture • dry, moist, diaphoretic - M.I., shock
The Physical Assessment • Palpate for Turgor • pinching skin over collar bone or back of hand • decreased in dehydration tenting • increased in edema • Assess for edema • accumulation of fluid in body tissues • depress skin over ankle
The Physical Assessment • Rate the Edema • 1+ = slight pitting • 2+ = deeper pit • 3+ = obvious pit, extremities are swollen • 4+ = the pit remains • Edema occurs in cardiovascular disease, renal failure and cirrhosis of liver
The Physical Assessment • Hair • inspect distribution and quality • palpate for texture • inspect the scalp for lesions • Nails • inspect for curvature, color and thickness
Variations in the Older Adult • Loss of subcutaneous tissue • wrinkles, sagging, decreased turgor • Skin tags • small flaps of excess skin • Decreased hair and nail growth • “Liver spots” • small flat brown macules
Primary Skin Lesions • Macule • flat color change in the skin - freckle • Papule • elevated palpable mass with circumscribed boarder - elevated mole • Nodule • elevated, solid mass extending deeper - lipoma
Primary Skin Lesions • Vesicle • fluid filled with thin translucent walls - blister • Wheal • larger than vesicle - insect bite, hives • Pustule • pus filled vesicle - acne • Cyst • elevated, encapsulated mass - sebaceous cyst
Secondary Skin Lesions • Atrophy • translucent, dry, paperlike skin resulting from thinning or wasting away due to loss of elastin • Ulcer • deep crater-like, irregular shaped area of skin loss extending into the dermis • Fissure • cracks with sharp edges - corner of mouth, feet
Vascular Skin Lesions • Port-wine stain • lg. Flat mass of blood vessels on skin surface • Strawberry mark • bright red, raised cluster of immature capillaries • Petechiae • flat, red-purple “freckles” caused by tiny hemorrhages
Vascular Skin Lesions • Ecchymosis • bruising - release of blood into surrounding tissues • trauma, hemophilia, liver disease • Hematoma • similar to ecchymosis but is raised, swollen
NCLEX • The nurse assessing a dark skinned client for cyanosis knows that in which of the following would cyanosis be more visible in a dark skinned individual? • A. Sclera • B. MM and nail beds • C. Generalized skin color • D. Palms of the hands and feet
NCLEX • A nurse assessing an elderly thin client notes the skin turgor over the client’s clavicle is decreased. The nurse interpretes this finding as which of the following? • A. Client is dehydrated • B. Client has edema • C. This is a normal finding for this client • D. The client has experienced a recent weight loss.
NCLEX • When performing a screening and assessment on a 44 year old female, the nurse notes a patch of hair loss. • The nurse suspects which of the following? • A. Dandruff • B. Alopecia • C. Scalp ringworm (tinea capitis) • D. head lice
NCLEX • When inspecting a client’s nails the nurse notes that the angle of the nail base is greater than 180 degrees. What is this condition called? • A. Alopecia • B. edema • C. tenting • D. clubbing
NCLEX • When working with an older person, you would keep in mind that the older adult is most likely to experience which of the following changes with aging? • A. thinning of the epidermis • B. thickening of the epidermis • C. oiliness of the skin • D. Increased elasticity of the skin
NCLEX • Which of the following glands plays a role in killing bacteria? • A. sebaceous (oil) glands • B. Eccrine sweat glands • C. Apocrine sweat glands • D. Ceruminous glands