Mary O'Reiley Part I Small Bowel Obstruction 2021 | RN 101 Part I: Small Bowel Obstruction Next Gen Unfolding Reasoning - COMPLETE
Part I: Small Bowel Obstruction Next Gen Unfolding Reasoning Mary O’Reilly, 55 years old Primary Concept Elimination Interrelated Concepts (In order of emphasis) ∙ Patient Education ∙ Clinical judgment NCLEX Client Need Categories Covered in Case Study NCSBN Clinical Judgment Model Covered in Case Study Safe and Effective Care Environment Step 1: Recognize Cues ∙ Management of Care Step 2: Analyze Cues ∙ Safety and Infection Control Step 3: Prioritize Hypotheses Health Promotion and Maintenance Step 4: Generate Solutions Psychosocial Integrity Step 5: Take Action Physiological Integrity Step 6: Evaluate Outcomes ∙ Basic Care and Comfort ∙ Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies ∙ Reduction of Risk Potential ∙ Physiological Adaptation Copyright © 2020 Keith Rischer, d/b/a KeithRN. All Rights reserved. Part I: Initial Nursing Assessment Present Problem: Mary O’Reilly is a 55-year-old woman with a prior history of partial colectomy w/colostomy and small bowel obstruction three months ago that resolved with bowel rest and required no surgical intervention. Three days ago Mary developed a sudden onset of sharp generalized abdominal pain with nausea, vomiting and decreased output from her colostomy bag. She has had two small glasses of water today. Mary is admitted to the medical/surgical unit and you will be the nurse caring for her. You receive the following highlights of report from the emergency department (ED) nurse: ∙ CT of her abdomen/pelvis revealed high-grade small bowel obstruction. ∙ Lactate 2.8, WBC 14.7, Sodium 143, Potassium 3.7, Creatinine 1.35 ∙ An NG was placed and she is on low intermittent suction. She had NG output of 225 mL of bile green liquid. ∙ Received hydromorphone 0.5 mg IV for pain one hour ago. Abdominal pain decreased from 9/10 to 3/10 and she is resting more comfortably. ∙ Abd. is firm, slightly distended, with tympanic bowel sounds. ∙ Initial HR/BP was 102 and 92/48. ∙ Most recent vital signs: T: 99.8 (o) P: 78 (reg) R: 18 BP: 108/52 after 1000 mL 0.9% NS bolus 20 g. peripheral IV in left forearm. What data from the history are RELEVANT and must be NOTICED as clinically significant by the nurse? (NCSBN: Step 1 Recognize cues/NCLEX Reduction of Risk Potential) RELEVANT Data from Present Problem: Clinical Significance: - CT of her abdomen/pelvis revealed high-grade small bowel obstruction. - Abd. is firm, slightly distended, with tympanic bowel sounds. - Pt. reports decreased output in colostomy - WBC: 14.7 - Lactate: 2.8 - History of bowel obstruction - T: 99.8 - Creatinine: 1.35 - Potassium: 3.7 - High-grade bowel obstruction would be the admitting diagnosis and priority for plan of care for this patient. - Abd. Assessment abnormal, should not be distended. - If there’s no change in input and decrease in output, concerning. - sign of infection. - Signs of sepsis. - Higher risk of recurrent obstruction. - Slightly elevated; monitor for trends. - High; dehydration, risk for AKA - Low end of normal; vomiting = at risk for hypokalemia After receiving report, you quickly review this patient’s past medical - - - -
Written for
- Institution
- Arizona Western College
- Course
- Nursing (RN101)
Document information
- Uploaded on
- December 9, 2021
- Number of pages
- 15
- Written in
- 2021/2022
- Type
- CASE
- Professor(s)
- Mary o\'reiley
- Grade
- A
Subjects
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part i small bowel obstruction next gen unfolding reasoning
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rn 101 mary oreiley part i small bowel obstruction 2021
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mary o’reilly is a 55 year old woman with a prior history of partial colectomy
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