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Preparing Patients for the Operating Room. Makesha V. Miggins June 24, 2013. When does it start?. As soon as you meet the patient! Remember we’re surgeons so every patient is a potential surgical candidate . Why is it important? .
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Preparing Patients for the Operating Room Makesha V. Miggins June 24, 2013
When does it start? • As soon as you meet the patient! • Remember we’re surgeons so every patient is a potential surgical candidate
Why is it important? • Identifies patients who might require a more extensive preoperative evaluation • Predicts post operative complications and morbidity/ mortality
Top patient risk factors most predictive of post operative mortality
ASA Classification • I. Normal healthy patient • II. Patient with mild systemic disease • III. Patient with severe systemic disease that limits activity but is not incapacitating • IV. Patient who has incapacitating disease that is a constant threat to life • V. Moribound patient is not expected to survive 24 hours with or without an operation
Key components • Chief Complaint and History • Past medical and surgical history • Allergies • Medications • Review of Systems • Physical Exam • Appropriate Labs and Studies
Key Component: History • Self explanatory- just get the details and summarize pertinent data • Patients often “forget” about prior operations or think they aren’t important.
Key Component: Allergies • Again, self explanatory but necessary to determine preoperative antibiotic prophylaxis • Don’t forget the 10% cross reactivity between penicillins and cephalosporins
Key Component: Medications • Again, self explanatory • Don’t forget herbal supplements
Key Component: Review of Systems • Constitutional/ General • Eyes • Ear, Nose, Mouth, Throat • Cardiovascular • Respiratory • Gastrointestinal • Genitourinary • Musculoskeletal • Integumentary • Neurological • Psychiatric • Endocrine • Hematologic/ lymphatic • Allergic/ immunology
Informed consent • Blood • Pre printed forms that detail the risks of blood transfusion. • Operative/ Invasive • Generic forms • Procedure specific forms • Must list the risks associated with the procedure and generalized risks as well as benefits
Pre-op Orders/ Considerations • CXR • EKG • Labs • Blood bank • Diet- NPO after midnight versus Hold tube feeds on call to OR. • Maintenance IVF while NPO • Special orders- bowel preps, ostomy site marking etc.
Pre-op Note • PRE-OP DIAGNOSIS: • PROCEDURE: planned surgery. • LABS: CBC, chemistries, PT/INR, urinalysis, etc. • CHEST X-RAY: note findings. • EKG: note findings. • BLOOD: not needed, type/screen or type/cross 2 units packed RBCs, etc. • ORDERS: NPO, preoperative antibiotics, skin or colon preps, etc. • CONSENT: signed and on chart (if so).