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Published byLiliana Johnston Modified over 9 years ago
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Temperature (T) Pulse (P) Respiration (R) Blood pressure (BP) Pain (often called the fifth vital sign) Oxygen Saturation
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Upon admission to a healthcare setting When certain medications are given Before and after diagnostic and surgical procedures Before and after certain nursing interventions In emergency situations
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Definition: the heat of the body measured in degrees › The difference between production of heat and loss of heat › Normal temperature: 97.0ºF (36.0ºC) to 99.5ºF (37.5ºC) Process: heat is generated by metabolic processes in the core tissues of the body, transferred to the skin surface by the circulating blood, and dissipated to the environment
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Core temperatures › Tympanic and rectal › Esophagus and pulmonary (invasive monitoring devices) Surface body temperatures › Oral (sublingual) › Axillary
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Oral: impaired cognitive functioning, inability to close lips around thermometer, diseases of the oral cavity, and oral or nasal surgery Rectal: newborns, small children, patients who have had rectal surgery, or have diarrhea or disease of the rectum, and certain heart conditions Tympanic: earache, ear drainage, and scarred tympanic membrane
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Pulse rate › Measured in beats per minute Pulse quality (amplitude) › The quality of the pulse in terms of its fullness Pulse rhythm › Pattern of the pulsations and the pauses between them Normally regular
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Palpating the peripheral arteries Auscultating the apical pulse with a stethoscope Using a portable Doppler ultrasound
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Temporal Carotid Brachial Radial Femoral Popliteal Posterior tibial Dorsalis pedis
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Indications › Patient is receiving medications that alter heart rate and rhythm › A peripheral pulse is difficult to assess accurately because it is irregular, feeble, or extremely rapid Method › Count the apical rate 1 full minute by listening with a stethoscope over the apex of the heart › Most reliable method for infants and small children; can be palpated with fingertips
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Rate › Adults: 12 to 20 times per minute › Infants and children breathe more rapidly Depth › Varies from shallow to deep Rhythm › Regular: each inhalation/exhalation and the pauses between occur at regular intervals
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Method › Inspection (observing and listening) › Listening with the stethoscope › Counting the number of breaths per minute Considerations › If respirations are very shallow and difficult to detect visually, observe sternal notch › Patients should be unaware of the respiratory assessment to prevent altered breathing patterns
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Exercise Medications Smoking Chronic illness or conditions Neurologic injury Pain Anxiety
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Retractions Nasal flaring Grunting Orthopnea (breathing more easily in an upright position) Tachypnea (rapid respirations)
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Ineffective Breathing Pattern Impaired Gas Exchange Risk for Activity Intolerance Ineffective Airway Clearance Excess Fluid Volume Ineffective Tissue Perfusion
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Definition › The force of the blood against arterial walls Systolic pressure › The highest point of pressure on arterial walls when the ventricles contract Diastolic pressure › The lowest pressure present on arterial walls during diastole (Taylor, 2007).
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Blood pressure is measured in millimeters of mercury (mm Hg) Blood pressure is recorded as a fraction › The numerator is the systolic pressure › The denominator is the diastolic pressure Pulse pressure › The difference between the systolic and diastolic pressure
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Using a stethoscope and sphygmomanometer Using a Doppler ultrasound Estimating by palpation Assessing with electronic or automated devices
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Use a cuff that is the correct size for the patient Ensure correct limb placement Use recommended deflation rate Correctly interpret the sounds heard
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Age Exercise Position Weight Fluid balance Smoking Medications
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Purpose › Measure the arterial oxyhemoglobin saturation of arterial blood Method › A sensor or probe, uses a beam of red and infrared light which travels through tissue and blood vessels › The oximeter calculates the amount of light absorbed by arterial blood › Oxygen saturation is determined by the amount of each light absorbed
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Monitoring patients receiving oxygen therapy Titrating oxygen therapy Monitoring those at risk for hypoxia Monitoring postoperative patients
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