Published Jul 2, 2006
merryheart
6 Posts
Help....I am trying to figure out a care plan on tissue perfusion after a gi bleed....any suggestions will greatly be appreciated........
Corvette Guy
1,505 Posts
Tissue perfusion after a GI Bleed? Are you referring to peripheral tissue perfusion? Even so, I'd lean more towards Fluid Volume Deficit; a state in which a patient experiences decreased intravascular, interstitial, and/or intracellular fluid.
Have you considered ... Decreased Cardiac Output [when the heart is unable to pump out an adequate amt to meet the metabolic demands of the body]?
Alt in Cardiac Output R/T Reduced Preload S/T GI Bleed AEB
diagnosis-admitted with chest pain....gi bleed....dark tarry stool...chronic pancreatitis....Low h and h........acute pain
Daytonite, BSN, RN
1 Article; 14,604 Posts
OK, LPN to be, here you go. . .I'm assuming this is a class assignment because, honestly, if you are needing to include Ineffective tissue perfusion as a nursing diagnosis after a GI bleed, this patient is in some kind of trouble. Deficient fluid volume would probably be a better diagnostic choice. However, since you have asked for ineffective tissue perfusion. . .
First, you need to assemble the physical assessment and history data that you have collected that will support this diagnosis. The patient should also have at least one or more of the following symptoms (according to NANDA):
Chest pain and the low H&H can also be included as a symptom of this particular diagnosis. I would also include the dark tarry stools although dark tarry stools are more a symptom of a slower upper GI bleed because the blood has had time to be digested. Acute upper GI bleeders are usually puking the blood and blood clots out. Acute pain is not specific enough. You need to identify exactly where this acute pain is.
There must also be a cause for the patient's decrease in oxygen resulting in failure of the tissues to be nourished at the capillary level. So, hypovolemia and/or a decreased hemoglobin concentration in the blood is what is existing.
Second, the nursing interventions for your care plan will then be things that address each of the symptoms that have brought you to the nursing diagnosis. So, you have listed chest pain, dark tarry stools, low H&H and acute pain (exact site unknown to me). Here are some suggestions of nursing interventions for these symptoms:
Chest Pain
Dark, tarry stools (melena)
Low H&H
Pain (assuming it's abdominal)
Goals/Outcomes:
Hope this is helpful and gives you an idea of where to go with this. The listings of interventions is not complete. I'm sure there are more nursing interventions you can think of to add. If you have an actual patient in mind that you are writing this for, it is always better to go with the actual symptoms and problems they are experiencing. Seriously, by the time a patient gets to the ineffective tissue perfusion stage of GI bleeding they are in shock, have a mesentery infarct or peritonitis and nearly dying or at death's door and other more serious problems are going on that are going to take precedence to keep the patient alive.