Published Feb 23, 2016
newrnnurse2b
4 Posts
I just need some help working through this.
You are the nurse on duty on the intermediate care unit, and you are scheduled to take the next admission. The emergency department (ED) nurse calls to give you the following report: "This is Barb in the ED, and we have a 42-year-old man, K.L., with lower GI [gastrointestinal] bleeding. He is a sandblaster with a 12-year history of silicosis. He is taking 40 mg of prednisone per day. During the night he developed severe diarrhea. He was unable to get out of bed fast enough and had a large maroon-colored stool [hematochezia] in the bed. His wife 'freaked' and called the paramedics. He is coming to you. His vital signs [VS] are stable--110/64, 110, 28--and he's a little agitated. His temperature is 36.8� C. He hasn't had any stools since admission, but his rectal exam was guaiac positive and he is pale but not diaphoretic. We have him on 5 L O2/NC [oxygen by nasal cannula]. We started a 16- gauge IV with lactated Ringer's [LR] at 125 ml/hr. He has an 18-gauge Salem sump to continuous low suction; the drainage is guaiac positive. We have done a CBC with differential, chem 14, PT/INR and PTT, a T&C [type and crossmatch] for 4 units RBCs, and a urinalysis [uA]. He's all ready for you."
So the first question is - How do you prepare for this patients arrival?
I said Look at the labs that have been done to see what the results were
Have IV pole ready for infusion of Lactated Ringers.
Have oxygen ready for patient
Intubation tray at bedside in case of emergency
Bed ready to transfer patient from stretcher.
Anything else you would do?
Second question is - Given K.L's history, what do you think significantly contributed to the GI bleeding?
I said - Corticosteroids put you at risk for GI bleed.
Age is also a risk factor for GI bleeds
Are there any other risk factors he has?
KL arrives on your unit, as you help him transfer from the ED stretcher to the bed, he becomes very dyspneic and expels 800 mL of maroon stool.
Question 3 - what immediate complication concerns you the most?
I wasn't sure on this one but I said, Patient is hemodynamically compromised/unstable because patient is becoming hypovolemic due to loss of blood.
Would that be correct?
Question 4 - what are the first three actions you would take?
I said - Switch patient to nonrebreather face mask to give the patient more oxygen since patients hemoglobin and hematocrit probably have decreased from bleeding
Check blood pressure and pulse to determine if patient may be going into hypovolemic shock
Increase head of the bed to assist with oxygenation
Those are the only things I could think of, would you do something differently?
KL reports nausea. VS 92/5/, 116, 32, 93%. The physician orders IV fluid bolus of 500 ml 0.9% normal saline and 2 unites of packed RBC stat.
Question 5 - What additional interventions do you need to institute?
I said - Antiemetic to prevent vomiting
Slow, deep breathing when nausea is present
Give patient crackers to help with nausea
What else could I do for the patient as far as interventions?
Question 6 - What assessment indicators would you monitor in K.L?
I said - Respiratory assessment to asses for fluid volume overload such as crackles in lungs, trouble breathing, increased reparations.
Also assess for adverse reaction to the blood
What are signs and symptoms of adverse reaction? What other assessments would I monitor?
During a colonoscopy, KL begings passing large amounts of bright red blood. He becomes paler and more diaphoretic and begins to have altered level of consciousness.
Identify 5 immediate interventions you should initiate?
I have no idea on this one. Would you want to give oxygen to help with circulation? Maybe elevated head of bed? Help?
TriciaJ, RN
4,328 Posts
Is this homework? You could probably look up GI bleed and get a lot of the answers there. But he's clearly going into shock on you (please research signs of shock and interventions). So skip the damn crackers (why isn't he NPO?). You're not treating him symptomatically at this point. You need to call the doctor and get him transferred to the ICU or to surgery. If your hospital has a rapid response team you should have called them by now too.
And keep the fluids cranked up.
Yes, this is a case study for school. I'm not asking for answers, I already gave what my answers were. I just want guidance in the right direction if I am wrong
roser13, ASN, RN
6,504 Posts
If you're in school, are you already a nurse, working toward another degree? If not, you really need to change your name. You may not (actually it's illegal to) label yourself as an RN if you are not an RN.