Medical-surgical Nursing Demystified

(Sean Pound) #1

(^214) Medical-Surgical Nursing Demystified
INTERPRETING TEST RESULTS



  • Skull x-ray shows fractures.

  • MRI shows edema and hemorrhage.

  • CT scan shows hemorrhage, cerebral edema, displacement of midline
    structures.

  • EEG indicates focal seizure activity.


TREATMENT



  • Surgical interventions may be necessary (craniotomy):

    • Removal of hematoma

    • Ligation of bleeding vessel

    • Burr holes (drilling holes) for decompression

    • Debridement of foreign material and dead cells



  • Administer antibiotics for open head injuries to prevent infection.

  • Ventilatory assist if needed—intubation and mechanical ventilation.

  • Administer low-dose opioids for restlessness, agitation, and pain in ventilator-
    dependent patients:

    • morphine sulfate or fentanyl citrate



  • Administer osmotic diuretics to reduce cerebral edema:

    • mannitol



  • Administer loop diuretics to decrease edema and circulating blood volume:

    • furosemide



  • Administer analgesics:

    • acetaminophen (Tylenol)



  • High-protein, high-calorie, high-vitamin diet.

  • Platelet and packed RBC transfusions—if blood counts warrant transfusion.


NURSING DIAGNOSES



  • Risk for injury

  • Ineffective tissue perfusion

  • Decreased intracranial adaptive capacity

  • Risk for disturbed thought processes

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