Critical Care Notes
Critical Care Notes
Critical Care Notes
Hospitalization:
For Patients: For Families:
Concern about primary diagnosis Concern
Pain/Discomfort Stress
Stress / Costs Costs
How you assess your Patient:
Look, Listen, & Feel
o For the primary diagnosis but also to prevent any secondary injury or complication while the
patient stays under our care
Assess, Diagnose, Provide interventions, Monitor, Evaluate, Maintain, Provide comfort
How often should we assess our Patients?
The frequency of measuring vital signs and The individual characteristics of the patient as
performing physical assessments should be articulated in the American Association of
based on each patient’s needs rather than Critical- Care Nurses Synergy Model— stability,
specific time intervals complexity, predictability, vulnerability, and
• Vital signs are noted every 1 hour, and resiliency
sometimes as often as every 5 to 15 minutes, Patients who are at greatest risk for an adverse
depending on the patient’s condition. outcome (eg, patients with frequently changing
physiological status, whose response to specific
therapy requires close monitoring) should
receive more frequent assessments.
Are there any National Standards?
• Reality is that no national standard can be set Practice and policies should allow nurses to use
because of the variability of patients, nurses, their judgment to prioritize and adapt the
institutions, and available resources. patient’s care to address the patient’s unique
Assessment and subsequent documentation situation.
should be determined for each population of
patients on the basis of their individual needs in
each individual setting.
Vital Signs: Some Routines Vital Signs:
When to take and document • General appearance
• At Admission • Respiratory rate (02 Saturation, ETCO2) •- Heart
• Before a procedure rate
• Before leaving the unit • Blood pressure
• Before transfer • Temperature
• Neuro Assessment
Did you say “MEWS”? (no longer going to be used / transitioning out of)
Has the Patient Changed?
• While taking vital signs and Neuro Exam • Has it happened before?
• Have you read the progress notes?
• New injuries • Orders?
• Facial expressions or reactions • Nurses notes?
• Change in color, appearance, odor
BP Readings:
From monitor: • Cuff
• Readings • Differences
• Wave (Art Line) • Loss of wave
• Changes
Blood Pressure and Heart Rate:
What is the patient’s baseline? Cushing Reflex:
Medications?
• Are they compliant? increased blood pressure
History of essential hypertension?
irregular breathing
Brain death
Temperature:
• Extreme variation may indicate hypothalamic • Fever
injury • Infection • Central
• Fever increases metabolic demands and oxygen • Hypothermia
requirements
Skin Signs:
Very valuable Knee caps
Most reliable signs of shock Temperature
Color • Put your hands on them
Pink or pale • Run your hand down their extremities
Moisture
Glasgow Coma Scale
• Simple effect standardized test Eye Open
Used to: Spontaneous (eyes open) 4
• Assess severity
• Compare treatments
• Guide to recovery
Arouse patient maximally by voice, shaking or To speech (any speech) 3
applying pain
Test all 4 extremities To pain 2
Intubated or trached write ET/T/U
Score of 7/8 intubate Never 1
Obeys 6
Localizes (deliberate/purposeful) 5
None (flaccidity) 1
triglycerides
normal: 40 - 149 mg/dL borderline abnormal: 150 - 199 mg/dL abnormal: 200 - 499 mg/dL
extreme abnormal: > 500 mg/dL
elevated triglycerides can significantly contribute to atherosclerosis
increased risk for coronary artery disease (CAD)
Complete blood count (CBC) anemia
low hemoglobin (Hgb): < 7 g/dL
low hematocrit (Hct): < 25 %
Chest Roentgenograph (X-Ray):
Used to rule out or rule in presence of other Pneumonia
diagnoses that cause significant chest pain that Pleural effusion
may mask cardiac type pain Pulmonary edema
Pulmonary embolus Pneumothorax
Computed Tomography (CT) Angiogram: Echocardiogram
evaluate the blood vessels in the chest Sonogram of the heart
rapid injection of an iodine-based intravenous (IV) trans-thoracic echocardiogram (TTE)
contrast into a vein while obtaining CT images more commonly used
mostly used to rule out dissecting aortic quicker to obtain
aneurysm less invasive
Electrocardiogram: (ECG or EKG) Stress Electrocardiography:
monitors for arrhythmias/dysrhythmias, continuous telemetry
ischemia/infarction, and coronary artery disease monitors heart during induction of physical or
(CAD) pharmacological stress
12 lead EKG:
allows for 12 individual views of electrical activity Holter monitor
of the heart (1 lead gives 1 view) continuous telemetry
views only one moment in time limited to 3-5 leads
Continuous telemetry: can pull up periods of time each lead
limited to 3-5 leads portable
can pull up periods of time each lead patient wears holter which is connected to leads
records telemetry for specific amount of time
Invasive Testing:
interventional radiological procedure Left heart catheterization: catheter insertion is
Cardiac catheterization: use of long catheter retrograde through femoral / brachial artery through
with a guide wire and radiographically opaque the aorta
dye to assess blood flow and functionality through the coronary arteries
o presence of lesions atrial Stents are only placed if vessel occlusions are
function > 75% or patient is symptomatic
ventricular function valvular through aortic valve
function pressure / flow cardiac Assessing blood flow / pressures
output Through left ventricle
Radiographically opaque dye is iodine Assessing wall integrity and motion
based cardiac catheterization
Check for iodine allergies
Right heart catheterization
catheter insertion is through femoral /
brachial vein through the vena cava vessels
through right atria
through tricuspid valve
through right ventricle
through pulmonic valve
Into pulmonic arteries
Cardiac Sound Regions Abbreviations:
M1 – mitral component of S1 AS – aortic stenosis
T1 – tricuspid component of S1
A2 – aortic component of S2 PS – pulmonic stenosis
P2 – pulmonic component of S2
TR –tricuspid regurgitation
S3 – follows S2 heart sound, may indicate systolic
MR – mitral regurgitation
heart failure occurs during passive left
ventricular (LV) filling
AR – aortic regurgitation
S4 – precedes S1 heart sound, may indicate
PR – pulmonic regurgitation
diastolic heart failure occurs during active LV
filling TS –tricuspid stenosis
MS – mitral stenosis
HCM–hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Cardiac Dysrythmias:
Electrical Conduction Rates:
• SA node 60-100 • AV node 40-60
• Intra-Atrial ~ 60 • Ventricle 20-40
Waves / Intervals:
Sinus Bradycardia
Sinus Arrhythmia: Sinoatrial (SA) Arrest or Block:
Atrial Dysrhythmias:
Premature Atrial Contraction (PAC)