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Promoting Bowel Elimination: Normal Process, Abnormal Characteristics, and Nursing Interventions

This chapter explores the process of normal bowel elimination, identifies abnormal stool characteristics, and discusses nursing interventions to assist patients with constipation. It also covers nursing measures to promote regular bowel elimination, collecting stool specimens, and performing focused bowel assessments. The structures involved in waste elimination are explained, as well as the functions of the intestines. The effects of aging on the intestinal tract, normal and abnormal stool characteristics, and drugs that may contribute to constipation or diarrhea are also discussed.

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Promoting Bowel Elimination: Normal Process, Abnormal Characteristics, and Nursing Interventions

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  1. Chapter 30 Promoting Bowel Elimination

  2. Chapter 30 Lesson 30.1

  3. Learning Objectives Theory • Describe the process of normal bowel elimination • Identify abnormal characteristics of stool • Discuss the physiologic effects of hypoactive bowel and nursing interventions to assist patients with constipation

  4. Learning Objectives Clinical Practice • Use nursing measures to promote regular bowel elimination in patients • Collect a stool specimen • Perform a focused assessment of the bowel • Assist RN in identifying appropriate nursing diagnoses for a patient with bowel problems

  5. Structures Involved in Waste Elimination • Small intestine • Duodenum • Jejunum • Ileum • Carries chyme from the stomach to the large intestine • Ileocecal valve • Controls flow of chyme into the large intestine

  6. Structures Involved in Waste Elimination • Large intestine • Ascending colon • Transverse colon • Descending colon • Sigmoid colon • Rectum • Anus

  7. Figure 30-1: The intestinal system

  8. Structures Involved in Waste Elimination • Walls of the intestine have four layers • Mucosa • Submucosa • Muscular layer • Serous layer (serosa)

  9. Functions of the Intestines • Small intestine • Processes chyme into a more liquid state • Adds bile from the liver to help break down fats • Villi on the small intestine walls absorb nutrients • Large intestine • Absorbs water, sodium, chlorides • Waste material stored until expelled

  10. Functions of the Intestines • Peristalsis moves chyme and gas through the intestines (causing bowel sounds) • Normal transit time in intestine is 18 to 72 hours • Feces is stored in the sigmoid colon until the gastrocolic reflex initiates defecation • Defecation is under voluntary control and uses the Valsalva maneuver

  11. Effects of Aging on the Intestinal Tract • Atrophy of the villi • Decreased absorption of fats, vitamin B12 • Decrease in motility • Bowel habits should not change in the normal healthy individual

  12. Normal Stool • Color: light to dark brown • Consistency: soft-formed in children and adults; consists of ¼ solids and ¾ water • Appearance: affected by diet and metabolism • Composition: solid materials consist of 70% undigested roughage from carbohydrates, fat, protein, and inorganic matter, and 30% dead bacteria

  13. Abnormal Stool • Blood in the stool: most serious abnormality • Fresh red blood: bleeding in colon • Occult: upper GI bleed (black stool called melena) • Pale white or light gray stool: absence of bile in the intestine • Large amounts of mucus, fat, pus, or parasites

  14. Hypoactive Bowel • Indicates a decrease in peristalsis • Usually results in constipation • Causes • Immobility • Injury to the bowel • Drugs • Surgery • A patient restricted to bed at risk for constipation • Flatus (gas) accumulates in the intestinal tract when peristalsis reduced or absent

  15. Drugs That May Contribute to Constipation • Narcotic analgesics • Codeine, morphine, meperidine • General anesthetics • Diuretics • Sedatives • Anticholinergics • Calcium channel blockers

  16. Drugs Used for Constipation • Stool softeners • Colace, Surfak, Dialose • Bulk forming laxatives • Fibercon, Metamusil, Citrucel • Irritant/stimulant laxatives • Ducolax, Neolid, Ex-lax, Correctol, Senokot • Saline laxatives • Citrate of magnesia, milk of magnesia, phospho-soda

  17. Hyperactive Bowel • Increase in peristalsis • Usually results in diarrhea • May be self-limiting • Causes • Inflammation of GI tract, infectious diseases, diseases such as: • Diverticulitis • Ulcerative colitis • Crohn’s disease

  18. Hyperactive Bowel • Drugs • Many antibiotics kill normal bowel bacteria, resulting in diarrhea • Patients who experience diarrhea from antibiotics should replace normal flora by: • Eating yogurt • Drinking buttermilk • Taking acidophilus (available OTC)

  19. Medications Used to Control Diarrhea • Camphorated tincture of opium (paregoric) • Diphenoxylate hydrochloride with atropine sulfate (Lomotil) • Loperamide hydrochloride (Imodium) • Difenoxin hydrochloride with atropine sulfate (Motofen)

  20. Fecal Incontinence • Lack of voluntary control of fecal evacuation; inability to retain feces • Causes • Illness • Cerebrovascular accident • Traumatic injury • Neurogenic dysfunction • Distressing condition that causes a loss of dignity • Feelings of being less of a person • Loss of self-respect • Embarrassed • Anxiety or fear of losing control

  21. Initial Assessment • Does patient have a bowel problem? • Usual bowel pattern • Any measures used to promote defecation? • Use of enemas or laxatives • Usual eating habits and exercise • Foods that produce diarrhea or constipation • Disorders that contribute to constipation or diarrhea

  22. Initial Assessment • Physical assessment • Shape of the abdomen with the patient supine • Flat, distended • Auscultate for bowel sounds in all four quadrants • Percuss for presence of excessive air/gas in the abdomen • Palpate for masses or tenderness

  23. Nursing Diagnoses • Constipation related to hypoactive bowel • Diarrhea related to food intolerance • Bowel incontinence related to loss of anal sphincter control • Pain related to abdominal distention • Self-care deficit, toileting related to traction • Disturbed body image related to bowel incontinence • Deficient knowledge related to factors that contribute to constipation

  24. Chapter 30 Lesson 30.2

  25. Learning Objectives Theory • List safety considerations related to giving a patient an enema • Describe three types of intestinal diversions • Discuss the stoma and peristomal assessment and skin care • Discuss the psychosocial implications for a patient who has an ostomy

  26. Learning Objectives Clinical Practice • Prepare to administer an enema • Assist and teach the patient who is incontinent with a bowel retraining program • Provide ostomy care, including irrigation and changing the ostomy appliance • Assist a patient to catheterize a continent diversion

  27. Rectal Suppositories • Used to promote bowel movements • Glycerin and bisacodyl suppositories • Promote bowel evacuation • Stimulate the inner surface of the rectum and increasing the urge to defecate • Form gas that expands the rectum • Melt into a lubricating material to coat the stool for easier passage through the anal sphincter

  28. Enemas • Fluid introduced into rectum by means of a tube • Stimulate peristalsis or wash out waste products • Often given before a colonoscopy or an x-ray • Volume of typical cleansing enema • Infants: 20 to 150 mL • Ages 3 to 5 years: 200 to 300 mL • School-age: 300 to 500 mL • Adults: 500 to 1000 mL

  29. Figure 30-2: Enema equipment

  30. Figure 30-4: Position for giving an enema

  31. Types of Enemas • Retention enema • Softens stool as oil is absorbed • Cleansing enema • Stimulates peristalsis through distention and irritation of colon and rectum • Distention reduction enema • Relieves discomfort from flatus causing distention • Medicated enema • Solution with drugs to reduce bacteria or remove potassium • Disposable enema (small volume) • Stimulates peristalsis by acting as irritant

  32. Amount and Temperature of Solution • Disposable enema units • Contain about 240 mL of solution • May be given at room temperature, but work best when slightly warmed • Cleansing enema • Adults is between 500 and 1000 mL; smaller amounts are used for children

  33. Bowel Training for Incontinence • Principles for establishing regular bowel elimination • Adequate diet • Sufficient fluids • Adequate exercise • Sufficient rest • Regular time for evacuation should be established • All efforts must be made to provide patient with environment that is conducive to evacuation • May require digital stimulation to relax the anal sphincter • Suppositories, stool softeners, and bulk laxatives used to assist in establishing a normal, regular bowel pattern

  34. Bowel Ostomy • A diversion of intestinal contents from their normal path • Results in formation of an external opening called a stoma • May be an internal tissue pouch with a valve opening • Special procedures aid in effective, controlled elimination through the stoma

  35. Types of Ostomies • Ileostomy • Diversion of the small bowel contents to a pouch or stoma; effluent is liquid • Colostomy • Diversion of the colon • Effluent may be liquid or solid depending on the site; may require irrigation

  36. Figure 30-6: Sigmoid colostomy

  37. Figure 30-6: Descending colostomy

  38. Figure 30-6: Ascending colostomy

  39. Figure 30-6: Double-barrel colostomy

  40. Figure 30-6: Ileostomy

  41. Figure 30-6: Kock’s pouch

  42. Ostomy Care • Skin care • Stoma and skin washed with mild soap and water and patted dry • Skin barrier paste is applied • Applying an ostomy appliance • Appliance is positioned with the stoma protruding through the opening in the center of the faceplate • Irrigating a colostomy • A solution is instilled into the colon via the stoma

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