1 / 33

Vital Signs

Vital Signs. Teresa V. Hurley. MSN, RN. What are vital signs?. Blood Pressure Pulse Respiratory Rate and Oxygen Saturation Temperature Abbreviated as T, P, R. Spo2 and B/P. Nursing Responsibility. Know range of acceptable values Client patterns

amity
Télécharger la présentation

Vital Signs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Vital Signs Teresa V. Hurley. MSN, RN

  2. What are vital signs? • Blood Pressure • Pulse • Respiratory Rate and Oxygen Saturation • Temperature • Abbreviated as T, P, R. Spo2 and B/P

  3. Nursing Responsibility • Know range of acceptable values • Client patterns • Frequency of taking based on client’s condition

  4. Temperature What is body temperature? How is heat generated? What is the core body temperature range in degrees C and F? Which sites are most often used to measure the core temperature? Which sites are most often used to measure body surface temperatures?

  5. Temperature • Hypothalamus • Range: 36 to 37.5 C or 97-99.5 F • Heat Production • Heat Loss Radiation Convection Evaporation Conduction

  6. Factors Affecting Body Temperature • Circadian Rhythms • Age • Exercise • Sex • Hormone levels • Stress • Environment

  7. Body Temperature • Afebrile • Febrile • Fever or Pyrexia • Alteration in in hypothalmic set-point • Increase in cellular metabolism and consumption of o2 • Increase in heart and respiratory rates • Prolonged fever leads to cellular, myocardial and or cerebral hypoxia

  8. Temperature Alterations • Hyperthermia Hypothermia • Heatstroke -Frostbite • Heat exhaustion

  9. Temperature Assessment • Devices • Tympanic: infrared sensors • Rectal: electronic or digital • Oral • Axillary • Temporal Artery • Automated Monitoring

  10. Mercury Thermometers: Glass • Toxic hazard effecting CNS via contact with its vapors and by touching it • Clean-up and Disposal

  11. Pulse • Number of pulsations/minute over a peripheral artery • Rate: Beats per minute • 60-100 Beat per minute • Bradycardia • Tachycardia • Rhythm: regular or irregular (dysrhythmia) • Amplitude • 0 to 4+

  12. Apical Pulse • Site: PMI at 5th ICS at left MCL • A/R rate correspond usually • Pulse Deficit is the difference between the A/R rate

  13. Peripheral Sites • Temporal • Carotid • Brachial • Radial • Femoral • Popliteal • Posterior tibial • Dorsalis pedis

  14. Pulse Assessment • Stethoscope for apical pulse using bell side to hear low frequency sounds of heart and blood • Doppler Ultrasound • Cardiac Monitor • Palpation of peripheral arterial pulse

  15. Factors Influencing Pulse Rates • Exercise • Temperature • Emotional States • Drugs • Hemorrhage • Postual Changes • Pulmonary Conditions

  16. Factors influencing Respirations • Exercise • Acute pain • Anxiety • Smoking • Body Position • Medications • Neurological Injury • Hemoglobin Levels

  17. Respirations • Passive process regulated by brain stem • Ventilation regulated most importantly by high arterial CO2 (hypercarbia) • COPD regulation is by hypoxemia (low 02 levels) via chemoreceptors in carotid artery and aorta • Respiratory Rate • Eupnea: 12 to 20 breaths/min • Tachypnea • Bradypnea

  18. Respiratory Alterations • Apnea • Dyspnea • Hyperventilation • Increase in rate • Decrease in depth • Fear • Hypoventilation • Decrease in rate • Decrease in depth

  19. Respiratory Alterations • Cheyne Stokes • Deep, rapid • Periods of apnea • Biot’s • Severe brain damage • Varying rate and depth • Periods of apnea

  20. Pulse Oximetry Spo2 • Spo2 acceptable ranges: 90%-100% • Sp02 85%-89% acceptable for chronic diseases • Spo2 less than 85% is unacceptable

  21. Complete Blood Count (CBC) • Measure of RBC’s count, volume of RBC’s. and Hgb concentration which is the capacity to carry O2

  22. Blood Pressure • What is Blood Pressure? • Systolic • Diastolic • Pulse Pressure • Difference between systolic and diastolic pressure

  23. Blood Pressure • Neural and Hormonal • B/P Average 120/80 mm Hg • Pulse Pressure difference between systolic and diastolic • Range: 30-50 mm Hg

  24. Hypertension • Asymptomatic • Diastolic 80-89 mm Hg on 2 subsequent visits • Systolic 120-139 mm Hg on 2 subsequent visits • HTN greater than 140/90 • Greater peripheral vascular resistance with decrease in blood flow to heart, brain and kidneys

  25. HTN Factors • What persons are more at risk for developing for HTN?

  26. Hypotension • Systolic B/P falls below 90 mm Hg • Hemorrhage • Pump failure of heart • Pallor • Mottling of skin • Clamminess • Confusion • Increase in HR • Decrease in urinary output

  27. Hypotension • Orthostatic (Postual) • Risk Factors • Dehydration • Anemia • Prolonged bedrest • Recent blood loss

  28. Blood Pressure • Variations in B/P • Peripheral resistance and compliance • Wall elasticity • Neural and humoral mechanisms • Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone • Increase per vascular resitance • Increase Na and H2O retention • Cardiac Output • 3.5-8 Liters average

  29. Blood Pressure Assessment Non-invasive Monitoring • Equipment: stethoscope and sphygmomanometer • Select appropriate cuff size • Sites • Brachial artery • Popliteal if brachial artery inaccessible

  30. B/P Measurement • Kortokoff Sounds • Phases I through V • What is the ausculatory gap? • During which phase is there a distinct change in sound? • When does phase V occur?

  31. What factors may influence accuracy of B/P measurement? • Exercise • Caffeine • Smoking • Cuff size • Too rapid or too slow release of valve • Release so descent is 2-3mm Hg

  32. Korotkoff Sounds • Phase I = 1st thump sound • Phase II = whooshing sound • Phase III = softer thump than Phase I • Phase IV = soft blowing that fades • Phase V = silence

  33. B/P Variation Factors • Age • Diurnal Rhythms • Stress • Ethnicity • Weight • Gender • Body Position • Exercise • Medications [anti-HTN, cardiac, opiod analgesics, contraceptives]

More Related