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Vital Signs

Vital Signs. Mrs. Brodermann. Height and weight . Weight Three types of scales Balance beam scales Dial scales Digital scales Who gets weighed Pregnant patients Infants Children Older adults Medical diagnosis Medication based on weight Conditions such as CHF or Edema. Height

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Vital Signs

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  1. Vital Signs Mrs. Brodermann

  2. Height and weight • Weight • Three types of scales • Balance beam scales • Dial scales • Digital scales • Who gets weighed • Pregnant patients • Infants • Children • Older adults • Medical diagnosis • Medication based on weight • Conditions such as CHF or Edema

  3. Height • Measured using movable ruler found on the back of most balance beam scales • Taken in infants and children

  4. Temperature • Reflects the balance between the heat a person’s body produces and the heat it loses • Core temperature • Adults – 98.6 (97 to 99 is normal) • This person is considered afebrile • A febrile patient has a temperature above 99 degrees Farenheit • Factors affecting temperature • Age – children have a higher body temperature and elderly have lower temp. • Gender – women are hotter. • Especially during ovulation and pregnancy

  5. Exercise – burning calories raises temperature • Time of Day – Cooler in the morning • Emotions – rises during stress • Illness • Sites for measuring temperature • Mouth – ranges from 97.6-99.6 • Rectum – 98.6-100.6 • Axillary – 96.6 – 98.6 • Tympanic – 98.2-100.2 • Types of thermometers • Electronic • Tympanic • Temporal • Disposable

  6. Pulse • Normal pulse is between 60-80 beats per minute • Factors affecting pulse • Time of day – lower in the morning • Gender – Women are faster. • Body type and size – thin, tall people have lower pulse rate • Exercise – higher when exercising • Stress or emotions – higher • Fever – will increase up to 10 beats per minute • Medications – many affect pulse • Blood volume – decreased blood volume makes heart beat faster

  7. Pulse sites • Carotid artery – runs on either side of the neck • Brachial artery – found at the bend of the elbow • Radial artery – found in the wrist • Femoral artery – at the function of the upper thigh and the torso • Popliteal artery – behind the knee • Posterior tibial artery – near the rounded bone at the inner ankle • Dorsalispedis artery – top of the foot

  8. Pulse characteristics • Rate • Rhythm • Strength • Regular or irregular • Arrhythmias • Bradycardia • Tachycardia • Bounding (forceful) • Thready • Strong • weak

  9. Respiration • Normal respiratory rate is 12-20 • Characteristics • Rate per minute • Infant 20+ • Child – 18-20 • Adult – 12-20 • Rhythm • Spacing between breaths • Depth • Shallow, deep or regular

  10. Factors affecting respiration • Medications such as morphine • Pain (dyspnea) • Position (orthopnea) • Periods of no breathing are called apnea • Periods lasting longer than 4-6 minutes can cause brain damage or even death. • Assessing respiration • One full cycle of rise and fall of the chest is one breath • Count for a full minute • Abnormal sounds • Wet • Dry (crackles) • High-pitched sounds (wheezing)

  11. Blood pressure • Systolic • Highest pressure level during contraction • Diastolic • Lower pressure as the artery drops and relaxes • Both are measured in millimeters of mercury • Normal BP is 120/80 • Hypertension/hypotension • Many factors can affect blood pressure • Age, activity, stress, body position and medications. • Orthostatic hypotension – positional drop in pressure • Cautions • Do not measure BP is arms with IV lines, Dialysis shunts, major cuts or wounds, post mastectomy side.

  12. Typical Vital signs flow sheet • Includes the following: • Date • Weight • Temp • BP • Pulse • Resp • Pulse Ox • Pain • Initials

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