The nursing instructor is discussing postoperative care with a group of nursing students. A student nurse asks, Why does the patient go to the PACU instead of just going straight up to the postsurgical unit? What is the nursing instructors best response?
- A. The PACU allows the patient to recover from anesthesia in a stimulating environment to facilitate awakening and reorientation
- B. The PACU allows the patient to recover from the effects of anesthesia, and the patient stays in the PACU until he or she is oriented, has stable vital signs, and is without complications
- C. Frequently, patients are placed in the medicalsurgical unit to recover, but hospitals are usually short of beds, and the PACU is an excellent place to triage patients
- D. Patients remain in the PACU for a predetermined time because the surgeon will often need to reinforce or alter the patients incision in the hours following surgery
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The PACU provides care for the patient while he or she recovers from the effects of anesthesia. The patient must be oriented, have stable vital signs, and show no evidence of hemorrhage or other complications. Patients will sometimes recover in the ICU, but this is considered an extension of the PACU. The PACU does allow the patient to recover from anesthesia, but the environment is calm and quiet as patients are initially disoriented and confused as they begin to awaken and reorient. Patients are not usually placed in the medicalsurgical unit for recovery and, although hospitals are occasionally short of beds, the PACU is not used for patient triage. Incisions are very rarely modified in the immediate postoperative period.
You may also like to solve these questions
The perioperative nurse is preparing to discharge a female patient home from day surgery performed under general anesthetic. What instruction should the nurse give the patient prior to the patient leaving the hospital?
- A. The patient should not drive herself home
- B. The patient should take an OTC sleeping pill for 2 nights
- C. The patient should attempt to eat a large meal at home to aid wound healing
- D. The patient should remain in bed for the first 48 hours postoperative
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Although recovery time varies, depending on the type and extent of surgery and the patients overall condition, instructions usually advise limited activity for 24 to 48 hours. Complete bedrest is contraindicated in most cases, however. During this time, the patient should not drive a vehicle and should eat only as tolerated. The nurse does not normally make OTC recommendations for hypnotics.
The nurse is caring for a 78-year-old man who has had an outpatient cholecystectomy. The nurse is getting him up for his first walk postoperatively. To decrease the potential for orthostatic hypotension and consequent falls, what should the nurse have the patient do?
- A. Sit in a chair for 10 minutes prior to ambulating
- B. Drink plenty of fluids to increase circulating blood volume
- C. Stand upright for 2 to 3 minutes prior to ambulating
- D. Perform range-of-motion exercises for each joint
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Older adults are at an increased risk for orthostatic hypotension secondary to age-related changes in vascular tone. The patient should sit up and then stand for 2 to 3 minutes before ambulating to alleviate orthostatic hypotension. The nurse should assess the patients ability to mobilize safely, but full assessment of range of motion in all joints is not normally necessary. Sitting in a chair and increasing fluid intake are insufficient to prevent orthostatic hypotension and consequent falls.
A patient is 2 hours postoperative with a Foley catheter in situ. The last hourly urine output recorded for this patient was 10 mL. The tubing of the Foley is patent. What should the nurse do?
- A. Irrigate the Foley with 30 mL normal saline
- B. Notify the physician and continue to monitor the hourly urine output closely
- C. Decrease the IV fluid rate and massage the patients abdomen
- D. Have the patient sit in high-Fowlers position
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: If the patient has an indwelling urinary catheter, hourly outputs are monitored and rates of less than 30 mL/hr are reported. The urine output should continue to be monitored hourly by the nurse. Irrigation would not be warranted.
The nurse is caring for a 79-year-old man who has returned to the postsurgical unit following abdominal surgery. The patient is unable to ambulate and is now refusing to wear an external pneumatic compression stocking. The nurse should explain that refusing to wear external pneumatic compression stockings increases his risk of what postsurgical complication?
- A. Sepsis
- B. Infection
- C. Pulmonary embolism
- D. Hematoma
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Patients who have surgery that limits mobility are at an increased risk for pulmonary embolism secondary to deep vein thrombosis. The use of an external pneumatic compression stocking significantly reduces the risk by increasing venous return to the heart and limiting blood stasis. The risk of infection or sepsis would not be affected by an external pneumatic compression stocking. A hematoma or bruise would not be affected by the external pneumatic compression stocking unless the stockings were placed directly over the hematoma.
The nurse is caring for a patient who is postoperative day 2 following a colon resection. While turning him, wound dehiscence with evisceration occurs. What should be the nurses first response?
- A. Return the patient to his previous position and call the physician
- B. Place saline-soaked sterile dressings on the wound
- C. Assess the patients blood pressure and pulse
- D. Pull the dehiscence closed using gloved hands
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The nurse should first place saline-soaked sterile dressings on the open wound to prevent tissue drying and possible infection. Then the nurse should call the physician and take the patients vital signs. The dehiscence needs to be surgically closed, so the nurse should never try to close it.
Nokea