ATI PN 2 Final Review Respiratory-S/S of asthma
ATI PN 2 Final Review Respiratory
ATI PN 2 Final Review
ATI PN 2
ATI
ATI PN
ATI PN 2 Final
... [Show More] Review Respiratory-S/S of asthma
Respiratory
-S/S of asthma
ATI p 125-127, Med-Surg p 900
EXPECTED FINDINGS
●● Dyspnea
●● Chest tightness
●● Anxiety or stress
PHYSICAL ASSESSMENT FINDINGS
●● Coughing
●● Wheezing
●● Mucus production
●● Use of accessory muscles
●● Prolonged exhalation
●● Poor oxygen saturation (low SaO2)
●● Barrel chest or increased chest diameter
Obtain history regarding current and previous asthma
exacerbations.
●● Onset and duration
●● Precipitating factors (stress, exercise, exposure
to irritant)
●● Changes in medication regimen
●● Medications that relieve symptoms
●● Other medications taken
●● Self‑care methods used to relieve symptoms
RISK FACTORS
●● Older adult clients have decreased pulmonary reserves
due to physiologic lung changes that occur with the
aging process.
◯◯ Older adult clients are more susceptible to infections.
◯◯ The sensitivity of beta‑adrenergic receptors decreases with age. As the beta receptors age and lose sensitivity, they are less able to respond to agonists, which relax smooth muscle and can result in bronchospasms.
●● Family history of asthma
●● Smoking
●● Secondhand smoke exposure
●● Environmental allergies
●● Exposure to chemical irritants or dust
●● Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
The most common indicators of asthma in adults include wheezing (high-pitched whistling sounds on expiration), cough, difficulty breathing, recurrent chest tightness, and history of obstructive symptoms that occur or worsen at night or in the presence of triggers. There may be breathlessness, increased respiration, tachycardia, pulsus paradoxus, hyperexpansion of the thorax, use of accessory muscles to breathe, appearance of hunched shoulders, chest deformity, increased nasal secretion, mucosal swelling, and nasal polyps. The patient may be cyanotic and use a tripod position to breathe.
Monitoring Signs and Symptoms
Global Assessment
“Has your asthma been better or worse since your last visit?”
Recent Assessment
“In the past two weeks, how many days have you:
• Had problems with coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath, or chest tightness during the day?”
• Awakened at night from sleep because of coughing or other asthma symptoms?”
• Awakened in the morning with asthma symptoms that did not improve within 15 minutes of inhaling a short-acting inhaled beta2 agonist?”
• Had symptoms while exercising or playing?”
Monitoring Pulmonary Function
Lung Function
“What is the highest and lowest your peak flow has been since your last visit?”
“Has your peak flow dropped below ______ L/min (80% of personal best) since your last visit?”
“What did you do when this occurred?”
Peak Flow Monitoring Technique
“Please show me how you measure your peak flow.”
“When do you usually measure your peak flow?
Monitoring Quality of Life and Functional Status
“Since your last visit, how many days has your asthma caused you to:
• Miss work or school?”
• Reduce your activities?”
• (For caregivers) Change your activity because of your child’s asthma?”
“Since your last visit, have you had any unscheduled or ED visits or hospital stays?”
Monitoring Exacerbation History
“Since your last visit, have you had any episodes or times when your asthma symptoms were a lot worse than usual?”
• If yes, “what do you think caused the symptoms to get worse?”
• If yes, “what did you do to control the symptoms?”
“Have there been any changes in your home or work environment (e.g., new smokers or pets)?”
Monitoring Pharmacotherapy
Medications
“What medications are you taking?”
“How often do you take each medication?”
“How much do you take each time?”
“Have you missed or stopped taking any regular doses of your medications for any reason?”
“Have you had trouble filling your prescriptions (e.g., for financial reasons or not on formulary)?”
How many puffs of your short-acting inhaled beta2 agonist (quick-relief medicine) do you use per day?”
“How many [name short-acting inhaled beta2 agonist] inhalers [or pumps] have you been through in the past month?”
“Have you tried any other medicines or remedies?”
Side Effects
“Has your asthma medicine caused you any problems, such as”
• “Shakiness, nervousness, bad taste, sore throat, cough, or upset stomach?”
Inhaler Technique
“Please show me how you use your inhaler.”
Monitoring Patient-Provider Communication and Patient Satisfaction
“What questions have you had about your asthma daily self-management plan and action plan?”
“What problems have you had following your daily self-management plan? Your action plan?”
“Has anything prevented you from getting the treatment you need for your asthma from me or anyone else?”
“Have the costs of your asthma treatment interfered with your ability to get asthma care?”
“How satisfied are you with your asthma care?”
“How can we improve your asthma care?”
“Let’s review some important information:”
• “When should you increase your medications? Which medication(s)?”
• “When should you call me [your physician or nurse practitioner]? Do you know the after-hours phone number?”
• “If you can’t reach me, what ED would you go to?”
-Asthma pt positions
NURSING CARE
●● Position the client to maximize ventilation (high‑Fowler’s).
●● Administer oxygen therapy as prescribed.
●● Monitor cardiac rate and rhythm for changes during an acute attack (can be irregular, tachycardic, or with PVCs).
●● Initiate and maintain IV access.
●● Maintain a calm and reassuring demeanor.
●● Provide rest periods for older adult clients who have dyspnea. Design room and walkways with opportunities for rest. Incorporate rest into ADLs.
●● Encourage prompt medical attention for infections and appropriate vaccinations.
●● Administer medications as prescribed.
-What are the fast-acting inhalers
Quick-relief medications are used only during acute exacerbations and should not be used on a regular schedule. They promote prompt reversal of acute airflow obstruction and relief of accompanying symptoms by direct relaxation of bronchial smooth muscle. Frequent use of quick-relief medications indicates poor asthma control and the need to initiate or increase long-term control therapy.
All patients should have a quick-relief medication readily available for acute symptoms of bronchospasm. The drug of choice for acute symptom relief is a short-acting inhaled selective beta2-adrenergic agonist, such as albuterol. An inhaled anticholinergic medication, such as ipratropium, can be used as an alternative for those who are intolerant to beta2-adrendergic agonists. Short-acting bronchodilators should be used only on an as-needed basis.
-SE of albuterol
Short‑acting beta2 agonists, such as albuterol, provide rapid relief of acute symptoms and prevent exercise‑induced asthma.
NURSING CONSIDERATIONS ●● Albuterol: Watch for tremors and tachycardia.
-Transmission of Tuberculosis –
ATI p 135 - 139, Med-Surg p 858
Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. TB is transmitted through aerosolization (airborne route). Once inside the lung, the body encases the TB bacillus with collagen and other cells. This can appear as a Ghon tubercle on a chest x‑ray.
Only a small percentage of people infected with TB actually develop an active form of the infection. The TB bacillus can lie dormant for many years before producing the disease. TB primarily affects the lungs but can spread to any organ in the blood. The risk of transmission decreases after 2 to 3 weeks of antituberculin therapy.
Educate the client and family to continue medication therapy for its full duration of 6 to 12 months, even up to 2 years for multidrug‑resistant TB. Emphasize that failure to take the medications can lead to a resistant strain of TB.
MEDICATIONS
Due to the resistance that is developing against the antituberculin medications, combination therapy of two or more medications at a time is recommended.
●● Because these medications must be taken for 6 to 12 months, medication noncompliance is a significant contributing factor in the development of resistant strains of TB.
●● The current four‑medication regimen includes isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol.
Ethambutol - This medication should not be given to children younger than 8 years of age.
Isoniazid - Vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) is used to prevent neurotoxicity from isoniazid.
Rifampin - Inform the client that urine and other secretions will be orange.
Pyrazinamide- Assess for history of gout, as the medication will cause an adverse effect of nongouty polyarthralgias.
Streptomycin sulfate - Due to its high level of toxicity, this medication should be used only in clients who have multidrug‑resistant TB (MDR‑TB). Streptomycin can cause ototoxicity, so monitor hearing function and tolerance often.
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
The most common indicators of asthma in adults include wheezing (high-pitched whistling sounds on expiration), cough, difficulty breathing, recurrent chest tightness, and history of obstructive symptoms that occur or worsen at night or in the presence of triggers. There may be breathlessness, increased respiration, tachycardia, pulsus paradoxus, hyperexpansion of the thorax, use of accessory muscles to breathe, appearance of hunched shoulders, chest deformity, increased nasal secretion, mucosal swelling, and nasal polyps. The patient may be cyanotic and use a tripod position to breathe.
-How long patients take TB Meds
Pharmacology
Pharmacological treatment depends on cause and epidemiological factors. Four medications are used together for the immediate treatment of TB. Once the susceptible results are complete the treatment should be altered for the individual. Medications include isoniazid (INH), rifampin (RIF), ethambutol (EMB), and pyrazinamide (PZA) (CDC, 2009b). These four medications have proven effective in the treatment of TB. Several side effects can occur while completing the treatment regimen. A common patient compliant is gastrointestinal (GI) distress, including loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, or stomach pain, during the first few weeks of treatment. Stomach irritation with TB treatment regimens are prevalent because the medications must be given on an empty stomach or two hours after meals, which may result in noncompliance with the treatment regimen (Table 32-4 p. 861).
-Chest tube care and what to do when ambulating and dislodging
ATI p 103 - 105, Med-Surg p 872
Chest drainage systems are a one-piece design containing three chambers. These chambers provide separate functions of fluid collection, water seal, and suction control. Fluid drains into the fluid collection chamber from a long six-foot soft flexible tube. The nurse records this amount every shift by placing a pen mark, time, and date next to the current fluid level. This provides an accurate reflection of the patient’s condition. The water seal collection chamber allows air to pass through fluid and bubble out but not return to the patient. The water seal column is calibrated and acts as a water manometer for measuring intrathoracic pressure. Also located within the water seal chamber is a leak indicator. As a person inhales and exhales, the fluid in the leak indicator rises and falls with each breath, causing a gentle wave motion. If the chest tube develops a leak that allows air into the pleural space, an air bubble will be present in the air leak indicator during a patient’s breathing movement. Suction, regulated by the control chamber, is used to help overcome an air leak by improving the rate of air and fluid flow out of the patient. The nurse must be vigilant when managing a chest tube by ensuring the ordered suction or water seal is delivered and observing for air leaks in the air leak indicator located within the water seal chamber. All chest tube and drainage device connections should be intact and banded to prevent accidental disconnects. A nurse must complete an accurate pulmonary assessment, and provide chest tube site care, pain control, and patient support.
Walking three to four times a day with rest periods of at least two hours can be an effective method to maintain mobility and provide rest. Effective pain control will not only promote mobility but also increase patient outcomes from cough and deep breathing exercises. Pain medication given by mouth should be given at least 60 minutes prior to any activity while intravenous medications should be given at least 30 minutes before any activity. Close monitoring of pain medication side effects is required secondary to CNS effects, including risk of falls and aspiration. Cough and deep breathing exercises every one to two hours while awake will assist in the removal of secretions in the lungs. Oxygen is administered to aid in ensuring adequate ventilation and improving oxygen levels.
Accidental disconnection, system breakage, or removal
These complications can occur at any time.
NURSING ACTIONS
●● If the tubing separates, instruct the client to exhale as much as possible and to cough to remove as much air as possible from the pleural space.
●● If the chest tube drainage system is compromised, immerse the end of the chest tube in sterile water to restore the water seal.
●● If a chest tube is accidentally removed, dress the area with dry, sterile gauze. TAPE ON 3 SIDES
-Tx for COPD
ATI p 129 – 133, Med-Surg p 887
MEDICATIONS
Bronchodilators (inhalers)
Short‑acting beta2 agonists, such as albuterol, provide rapid relief.
Cholinergic antagonists (anticholinergic medications), such as ipratropium, block the parasympathetic nervous system. This allows for the sympathetic nervous system effects of increased bronchodilation and decreased pulmonary secretions. These medications are long‑and are used to prevent bronchospasms.
Methylxanthines, such as theophylline, relax smooth muscles of the bronchi. These medications require close monitoring of serum medication levels due to narrow therapeutic ranges. Use only when other treatments are ineffective.
NURSING CONSIDERATIONS
●● Monitor serum levels for toxicity when taking theophylline. Adverse effects include tachycardia, nausea, and diarrhea.
●● Watch for tremors and tachycardia when taking albuterol.
●● Observe for dry mouth when taking ipratropium.
CLIENT EDUCATION
●● Encourage the client to suck on hard candies to help moisten dry mouth while taking ipratropium.
●● Encourage the client to increase fluid intake, report headaches, or blurred vision.
●● Monitor heart rate. Palpitations can occur, which can indicate toxicity of ipratropium.
Anti‑inflammatory agents
These medications decrease airway inflammation.
●● If corticosteroids, such as fluticasone and prednisone, are given systemically, monitor for serious adverse effects (immunosuppression, fluid retention, hyperglycemia, hypokalemia, poor wound healing).
●● Leukotriene antagonists, such as montelukast; mast cell stabilizers, such as cromolyn; and monoclonal antibodies, such as omalizumab, can be used.
NURSING CONSIDERATIONS
●● Watch for a decrease in immunity function.
●● Monitor for hyperglycemia.
●● Advise the client to report black, tarry stools.
●● Observe for fluid retention and weight gain. This is common.
●● Check the throat and mouth for aphthous lesions (canker sores).
●● Omalizumab can cause anaphylaxis.
CLIENT EDUCATION
●● Encourage the client to drink plenty of fluids to promote hydration.
●● Encourage the client to take glucocorticoids with food.
●● Advise the client to use medication to prevent and control bronchospasms.
●● Advise the client to avoid people who have respiratory infections.
●● Remind the client to use good mouth care.
●● Tell the client to use medication as a prophylactic prevention of COPD symptoms.
●● Instruct the client to not discontinue medication suddenly.
Mucolytic agents
These agents help thin secretions, making them easier for the client to expel.
●● Nebulizer treatments include acetylcysteine and dornase alfa.
●● Guaifenesin is an oral agent that can be taken.
●● A combination of guaifenesin and dextromethorphan also can be taken orally to loosen secretions.
THERAPEUTIC PROCEDURES
●● Chest physiotherapy uses percussion and vibration to mobilize secretions.
●● Raising the foot of the bed slightly higher than the head can facilitate optimal drainage and removal of secretions by gravity.
INTERPROFESSIONAL CARE
●● Consult respiratory services for inhalers, breathing treatments, and suctioning for airway management.
●● Contact nutritional services for weight loss or gain related to medications or diagnosis.
●● Consult rehabilitative care if the client has prolonged weakness and needs assistance with increasing activity level.
CLIENT EDUCATION
●● COPD is debilitating for older adult clients. Referrals to assistance programs, such as food delivery services, can be indicated.
●● Set up referral services, including home care services such as portable oxygen.
●● Encourage the client to eat high‑calorie foods to promote energy.
●● Encourage rest periods as needed. [Show Less]