Post-op Pain Management 2/2: Cardiac Arrest
History of Present Problem:
Sheila Dalton is a 52-year-old woman who has a history of chronic low back pain
... [Show More] and COPD. She had a
posterior spinal fusion of L4-S1 earlier today. Her pain is currently controlled at 2/10 and increases with
movement. She was started on a hydromorphone patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) with IV bolus dose
that is 0.2 mg and continuous rate of 0.2 mg/hour.
The nurse reported that her nausea has improved after receiving ondansetron IV four hours ago. She was
having increased pain despite using the PCA every 10 minutes. Her pain has decreased from 6/10 to 2/10
since the PCA bolus was increased from 0.1 mg to 0.2 mg of hydromorphone IV one hour ago.
Patient Care Begins:
RELEVANT Data from History:
Clinical Significance:
COPD
Chronic low back pain
Recent spinal fusion surgery
Hydromorphone use with
worsened pain
Nausea, relieved with Zofran
Low SpO2 89%
Low BP 92/48
History of respiratory issues, likely retains CO2, potential alveoli
dysfunction
Use of pain medication with chronic back pain?
Post-op day 0, need to assess for surgical complications/expected
findings, risk for infection/bleeding
Narcotic use (decr. RR)
Low oxygenation status on 4L NC
Is BP complication of meds, sign of bleeding?
Current VS:
T: 99.8 F/37.7 C (oral)
P: 78
R: 12
BP: 92/48
O2 sat: 89% room air 4 liters n/c
Your shift continues...
Thirty minutes later she is feeling more nauseated, and you administer ondansetron 4 mg IV push
prn. Five minutes later she puts the call light on again. You are not able to respond immediately
because you are helping your other patient get on the commode. Little do you know that Sheila is
going to depend on your ability to THINK LIKE A NURSE and clinically reason to save her life.
When you arrive in her room you observe the following...
© 2016 Keith Rischer/www.KeithRN.com
What assessment data is RELEVANT and must be recognized as clinically significant by the nurse?
RELEVANT Assessment Data: Clinical Significance:
Unresponsive
Ashen pale
Minimal resp. effort
Liquid emesis in mouth
Weak carotid pulse
24 bpm
Does not awake or arouse to
painful stimuli
signs of cardiac arrest, heart is not pumping blood and
shunting to core is likely occurring
Loss of consciousness from sudden lack of blood flow
Aspiration of gastric contents during arrest could have
occurred
Needs immediate intervention!!!
Current VS:
T: not assessed
P: 24
R: 4
BP: 72/40
O2 sat: 76% 4 liters n/c
What VS data is RELEVANT and must be recognized as clinically significant by the nurse?
RELEVANT VS
Data: Clinical Significance:
HR 24
RR 4
BP 72/40
O2 76%
This is still consistent with cardiac arrest, the heart has suddenly stopped
pumping blood resulting in bradycardia, hypotension, and loss of perfusion to
brain, minimal to no respiratory effort is occurring
Clinical Reasoning Begins...
1. What is the primary problem that your patient is most likely presenting with?
Cardiac Arrest
2. What is the underlying cause/pathophysiology of the primary problem?
The heart suddenly stops pumping blood due to an electrical malfunction.
3. What nursing priority(ies) will guide your plan of care? (if more than one-list in order of
PRIORITY)
CABC… Compressions, airway, breathing, then circulation. Call for help and immediately
perform compressions to start perfusing the tissues. Maintain patent airway, potential for
intubation. Manually breath patient with ambu bag. Perform defibrillation to allow the SA node to
take control of the electrical impulses of the heart for return to functioning.
Airway, Breathing, Circulation!
© 2016 Keith Rischer/www.KeithRN.com
4. What interventions will you initiate based on this priority?
Nursing Interventions: Rationale: Expected Outcome:
Compressions
Ambu bag breathing
Defibrillation
Manual pumping of the heart to perfuse the tissues
Oxygenate the pt during CPR between compressions
Allow the SA node to take over control of the heart
improved circulation
Improved oxygenation
Return of heart functioning
5. What body system(s) will you most thoroughly assess based on the primary/priority concern?
Respiratory and Cardiovascular
6. What is the worst possible/most likely complication to anticipate?
Sudden Cardiac Death or organ failure from lack of blood flow
7. What nursing assessments will identify this complication EARLY if it develops?
Attaching pt to monitor to assess heart rate/rhythm to monitor for improvement, monitor
pt response to interventions, does pt become responsive or breath independently?,
assessing perfusion and vital signs to see if there is adequate cerebral blood flow
8. What nursing interventions will you initiate if this complication develops?
Continue resuscitation and assess extent of organ damage if possible… Comfort care and
family support is SCD occurs.
A crash cart is brought into the ......................................CONTINUED [Show Less]