Transcript
Page 1: Preventing injury and error Surgical Basics Jan Moss, RN

Preventing injury and error

Surgical Basics

Jan Moss, RN

Page 2: Preventing injury and error Surgical Basics Jan Moss, RN

Agenda

Pre-operative preparation Anesthesia Options Intraoperative Considerations

– Patient Identification– Patient Positioning

Postoperative considerations– Pain control– Infection– Length of recovery

Page 3: Preventing injury and error Surgical Basics Jan Moss, RN

Blah, Blah, Blah…

“The table was placed in beach chair configuration. Head, neck, trunk and limbs were padded and protected in appropriate fashion.”

“The right lower extremity was prepped and draped in the usual sterile fashion.”

“Bilateral upper extremities were prepped and draped in standard sterile fashion.”

Page 4: Preventing injury and error Surgical Basics Jan Moss, RN

Types of Injuries

Wrong site, wrong procedure Wrong medication Skin breakdown/decubiti Burns Nerve damage Ischemia Eyesight

Page 5: Preventing injury and error Surgical Basics Jan Moss, RN

Pre-operative Preparation

Testing– Determines ability to sustain surgical insult– Determines type of anesthesia delivery– Blood Pressure, Diabetes, EKG, Liver function, CBC, Chest

X-ray, UA Medications

– Day before surgery, anti-inflammatory– Day of surgery, antibiotics– Post op pain meds– Smoking cessation?

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Patient/Procedure Confirmation

Surgical Consent Pre-operative marking “Time Out” in the operating room

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Anesthesia Choices

– Goals of anesthesia Exposure, Relaxation Keep patient alive Pain free, unaware, stable

– Local Anesthesia– Regional Anesthesia– Conscious Sedation– General Anesthesia

LMA vs. Intubation

Many photos courtesy of John DiPaola, MD

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Surgical Positioning

Goals – Exposure for surgeon– Immobilize patient– Injury prevention

Maintain circulation Maintain anatomic alignment Prevent pressure points

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Surgical Positioning

Considerations– No movement for minutes to hours– No ability to identify pain– Sometimes exposure wins out over comfort– Even supine can be injurious

Page 10: Preventing injury and error Surgical Basics Jan Moss, RN

Knee Arthroscopy

– Tourniquet– Leg holder (human and mechanical)

Apply pressure to open the medial aspect of knee

– Possible complications Hip injury Circulatory d/t tourniquet, thrombosis tourniquet abrasion/skin breakdown Quadriceps/hamstring muscle injury Non-operative leg

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Tourniquet

Leg Holder

Page 12: Preventing injury and error Surgical Basics Jan Moss, RN

Non-Operative Legunsupported

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Item laying on Patient

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Shoulder Arthroscopy

o “Beach Chair”o Operative arm is free to be moved. May be held or

rested. Non-operative arm must be securedo Head is secured with head resto Back of table may be removedo Patient’s legs must be positioned bent and circulation

maintainedo Possible complications

o Cervicalo Axillary nerve, brachial plexuso Thrombosis

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Head Support

Knees BentCompression Stockings

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Neck injuryPotential?

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Ready to prep

Operative arm is vulnerable

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Skinny Model

Add 150 lbs & imagine the injurypotential

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Spinal Surgery Positioning

o Proneo Positioning tables

o Supine (infrequent)o Possible complications

o Cervicalo Axillary nerveo Pressure Pointso Genital traumao Facial trauma

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Patient induced on back and then turnedProcess reversed at the end of procedure

Elevated frame

Gel pad underknees

Arms supportedFace in cradle

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Table is adjusted toget C-arm under… tippy!

C-Arm

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Challenges to positioning

Obesity Trauma Pre-existing conditions

– Arthritis, amputation, injury Diabetes Cardiac/Vascular disease Smoking

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Documentation

“The table was placed in beach chair configuration. Head, neck, trunk and limbs were padded and protected in appropriate fashion.”

“The right lower extremity was prepped and draped in the usual sterile fashion.”

“Bilateral upper extremities were prepped and draped in standard sterile fashion.”

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Postoperative Care

Pain Control– Pain affects blood pressure, vital signs– Narcotics affect respiration– Pain control is a chemical balance – Challenges in pain control

Surgical procedure, duration History of prior medication use Age, co-morbidities Experience with pain

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Recovery Times

Any surgery, requires recovery Routine post op MD appt in 1 week Generally speaking:

– Knee – 1week-6mo– Shoulder – 4-6 mo– Back – 3mo

Infection, complications will delay recovery Smoking complicates everything

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Questions?

Jan Moss, RN

GENEX Services, Inc

[email protected]

(503) 381-1065


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