Fundamental of Nursing II
Fundamental of Nursing II
Fundamental of Nursing II
Circulatory dysfunction.
Respiratory dysfunction.
Severe infection.
Trauma
Surgery
Organ dysfunction.
Metabolic dysfunction.
Unconscious patient
Definition
Are in the state of interrupted awareness of oneself and ones
surrounding, lack of ability to notice or respond to stimuli in the
environment
Causes of unconsciousness
Traumatic brain injury
Brain hypoxia- due to brain infarction or cardiac arrest
Severe poisoning with drugs that depress the activity of
CNS e.g. Alcohol, other hypnotics and sedatives
Severe fatigue
Anesthesia.
Levels of Unconsciousness
• Excitatory unconsciousness-
• Stuporous
• Fainting
• Somnolent
• Coma
• Vegetative stage
Assessment
• Each activity is given a score; the patient can get a total score from 3-
15
• The worst score is 3
• Even patient having brain stem dead score 3 the best is 15.
• Any reduction in score is seen as deterioration in conscious level and
should be brought to attention.
• A patient who scores 8 or less is considered in a deep coma.
Eye response
• Here pts are less aware of their environment and their verbal stimulus
to get a response
• If patients respond with only sounds, they score two.
• If there is no verbal response to both verbal and painful stimulus, pt
will score one
• However, if there is any damage to speech centres in the brain, patient
may be awake and alert but cannot talk.
Cont..
• Damage can result from trauma or can occur during surgery for
intracranial lesion such as a hematoma or a brain tumor
Motor response
• This grip response does not mean that pts have understood what has
been asked of them, rather it is a primitive reflex which is also present
in newborn babies and pts with dementia
• If pts do not respond by following commands, the next part of the
assessment involves assessing their response to a painful stimulus.
Respond to localizing pain
• If a central painful stimulus is applied, pts may flex or bend their arm
towards the source of pain, but do not localize or try to remove the
source of the pain.
• If pts do not localize, they may only flex their arm in response to a
painful stimulus.
• Withdrawing from pain or flexion to pain will give a pt a score of four.
Abnormal flexion (decorticate posturing)
• The patient make some kind of response when you talk to them, which
would be in any of the three components measures of the eyes, voice
or motor e.g. patient eye open when asked if they `are you okay?
• The response could be as little as a grunt or slight movement of a limb
when prompted by the voice
Pain
This must be done to evaluate the patient's progress and identify early
any impending complication.
You have addressed unconsciousness as a condition, however, it is
important to note that it is a symptom to an underlying
pathophysiological problem.
This problem has to be identified and treated for the patient to recover
completely.
REFERENCES