1 / 44

Inside the Operating Room: Heart Attacks, Strokes, and Falls

Inside the Operating Room: Heart Attacks, Strokes, and Falls. Presentation by: Stephanie Scully, RN BSN CHR Cardiac Operating Room NCP Health Ministry Chair. Objectives. To discuss three of the most common causes of death in the elderly population

Télécharger la présentation

Inside the Operating Room: Heart Attacks, Strokes, and Falls

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. Inside the Operating Room:Heart Attacks, Strokes, and Falls Presentation by: Stephanie Scully, RN BSN CHR Cardiac Operating Room NCP Health Ministry Chair

  2. Objectives • To discuss three of the most common causes of death in the elderly population • To describe heart attacks, strokes, and falls and how they occur • To demonstrate what surgical interventions are available to treat heart attacks, strokes, and falls

  3. What are the Top Causes of Death Amongst the Elderly Population? • Heart Disease • Cancer • Stroke • COPD • Flu/ Influenza • Diabetes • Injuries

  4. Topics We Will Focus On Today • Heart Attacks • Strokes • Falls

  5. HEART ATTACKSaka Myocardial Infarction (MI)

  6. Heart Attack Prevalence • Heart disease and cancer • Leading causes of death for >65 for 2 decades • 35% of all deaths are due to heart disease, including heart attacks and chronic ischemic heart disease

  7. What is a Heart Attack? • Damage and death of heart muscle from the sudden blockage of a coronary artery by a blood clot • Sudden blockage= blood and oxygen deprivation-> injury to the heart muscle= chest pain and chest pressure

  8. How do these blockages occur? • Coronary arteries provide heart with blood • Blood= oxygen and nutrients • CAD= Coronary Artery Disease • Fatty matter, calcium, proteins, inflammatory cells= plaque • Plaque is hard on the outside, mushy on the inside • When the plaque is hard, outer shell cracks= plaque rupture -> platelets form around rupture = blood clot **Total or near-total occlusion by blood clot = heart attack

  9. How a heart attack forms

  10. What are the symptoms of a Heart Attack? • Discomfort, pressure, heaviness, or pain in the chest, arm, or below the breastbone • Discomfort radiating to the back, jaw, throat, or arm • Fullness, indigestion, or choking feeling • Sweating, nausea/ vomiting, or dizziness • Weakness, anxiety, or shortness of breath • Rapid or irregular heartbeat *No symptoms= silent heart attack

  11. Time is of the Essence • Why is time important in treatment of heart attacks? • 20-40 minute window • Lack of blood flow restoration= irreversible death of the heart muscle begins • Muscle continues to die for 6-8 hours, or until the heart attack usually is "complete.“

  12. What is the damage? • Amount of damage depends on size of area supplied by the blocked artery and time between injury and treatment • Healing of the heart muscle begins soon after a heart attack and takes about eight weeks. • Scar tissue will form in the damaged area • Scar tissue does not contract= the heart's pumping ability is lessened after a heart attack

  13. How do we minimize damage during Heart Attacks? • Medications • Aspirin • Prevent additional clotting • Heart Codes • Cardiac Catheterizations • Angioplasty and stenting • Surgical intervention • Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting (CABG) • Depending upon blockage location and severity

  14. Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting • CABG is one treatment for CAD • A healthy artery or vein from the body is connected, or grafted, to the blocked coronary artery. • The grafted artery or vein bypasses (that is, goes around) the blocked portion of the coronary artery. • This creates a new path for oxygen-rich blood to flow to the heart muscle. • Surgeons can bypass multiple coronary arteries during one surgery.

  15. SURGICAL INTERVENTION FOR HEART ATTACKS- CABG CABG Surgery

  16. Benefits of CABG Surgery • Results are usually excellent • Improves or completely relieves angina symptoms • Most people remain symptom-free for as long as 10 - 15 years • May lower your risk of having a heart attack and help you live longer • You may need repeat surgery if blockages form in the grafted arteries or veins or in arteries that weren't blocked before.

  17. After CABG Surgery • Treatments do not cure CAD • It CAN happen again • Take medicines • Reduce blood pressure • Relieve work of heart • Prevent blood clots • Lower cholesterol • Make lifestyle changes • Dietary changes • Exercise • Quit smoking

  18. STROKEaka Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA)

  19. Stroke Prevalence • The third leading cause of death in America is stroke • Strokes are debilitating and lethal • Stroke kills almost 130,000 Americans each year—that’s 1 out of every 19 deaths. • On average, one American dies from stroke every 4 minutes. • Every year, more than 795,000 people in the United States have a stroke.

  20. What is a Stroke? • A stroke occurs when the blood supply to part of your brain is interrupted or severely reduced, depriving brain tissue of oxygen and food. • Within minutes, brain cells begin to die. • Strokes are treatable and preventable

  21. What are the Signs of Stroke? • Sudden severe headache • Weakness • Numbness • Vision problems • Confusion • Trouble walking • Difficulty talking • Dizziness • Slurred speech

  22. Different Types of Strokes • When blood supply to the brain is interrupted or reduced-> oxygen and nutrient deprivation= brain cell death • Two types • Ischemic stroke -> blocked artery • Hemorrhagic stroke -> leaking or burst blood vessel

  23. Ischemic Stroke • 85% of strokes are ischemic • Occur when one or both carotid arteries (supplying the brain with blood) become narrowed or blocked= severely reduced blood flow (ischemia) • Thrombotic stroke • A blood clot (thrombus) forms and blocks vessel • Blood clot= fatty deposits (plaque) • Embolic stroke • A blood clot or other debris is swept through your bloodstream to lodge in narrower brain arteries • This type of blood clot is called an embolus.

  24. Thrombotic vs. Embolic Strokes

  25. Time is of the Essence • A stroke is a MEDICAL EMERGENCY • Prompt treatment is crucial to survival • Early action can minimize brain damage and potential complications

  26. Interventions for Ischemic Stroke • To treat an ischemic stroke, doctors must quickly restore blood flow to your brain. • Medications • TPA- Clot buster • Within 4.5 hours • Aspirin • Reduce additional clotting • Emergency procedures • Catheter- administered TPA • Directly into the area where the stroke is occurring • Mechanical clot removal= = thrombectomy • Angioplasty and stenting the carotid artery • Carotid endarterectomy

  27. Carotid Endarterectomy (CEA) • Surgical removal of plaque from arteries that run along each side of your neck to your brain (carotid arteries) • May be done for someone that had a stroke, or someone at high risk for stroke • Determined by vascular ultrasound • Steps include: • Incision along side of neck • Opens up carotid artery • Blood may be rerouted temporarily through a shunt • Scrape out plaque • Stitch or patch artery shut • Close incision

  28. Carotid Endarterectomy

  29. When Surgery is Most Beneficial • CEA can be done several months after a stroke or TIA • Most benefit from the surgery within 2 weeks of the stroke or TIA • > 2 week surgery delay increases the risk for stroke, because people are more likely to have a stroke in the first few days and weeks after a first stroke or a TIA.

  30. Benefits of a CEA • Symptomatic patients with blockages of 70% or more benefit greatly • Less than 50% narrowing of the carotid do not seem to benefit from surgery • CEA works better than treatment with medicine alone in preventing stroke • (For people who have symptoms that can be attributed to a 70% to 99% blockage of the carotid arteries)

  31. After Carotid Surgery • Medications • Aspirin • Anti-platelet (prevent clots) • Cholesterol lowering • Exercise • Diet • Low fat, low cholesterol • Quit Smoking

  32. Falls

  33. Prevalence of Falls • Falls are one of the top causes of death among people 65 years of age and older • One in three older adults falls every year • Less than half report it • Falls are the leading cause of both fatal and nonfatal injuries in older adults • In 2010, the direct medical costs of falls was $30 billion

  34. The Truth about Falls • A fall can change your life • Falls lead to: • Disability • Loss of independence • Breaking bones and hips • Falls seldom “just happen’ • Preventing falls is important • Regular eye exams • Eliminating tripping hazards • Wearing non-skid shoes • Using assistive deices

  35. Falls Lead to Fracture, Trauma • Each year, more than 1.6 million older U.S. adults go to emergency departments for fall-related injuries. • Falls are the number one cause of fractures in older adults • Fall- related Fracture injuries: • Hip • Pelvis • Spine • Arm • Hand • Ankle

  36. Hip Fractures • One of the most serious types of fall injuries • Leading cause of injury and loss of independence among older adults • Healthy, independent older adults may be able to return home or live on their own after treatment and rehab • Long term care is always necessary

  37. What is a Hip Fracture? • A hip fracture is a break in the upper quarter of the femur (thigh) bone • The extent of the break depends on the forces that are involved • Type of surgery required • Bones and soft tissues involved • Level of fracture

  38. What causes a hip fracture? • Most commonly from a fall or from a direct blow to the side of the hip • Some medical conditions increase susceptibility • Osteoporosis • Cancer • Stress injuries • In severe cases, standing on a leg and twisting

  39. Surgical Treatment for Hip Fractures • Type of surgery depends on location, severity, and age • Repair with hardware • Metal screws into bone to hold it together until healed • Screws to metal plates along bone • Rods down center of bone through marrow (aka nails) • Replace femur • Partial hip replacement • If ends aren’t properly aligned, head and neck of femur removed and replaced • Replace hip joint • Total hip replacement • Replace upper femur and socket in pelvis **If blood supply to ball joint is damaged, bone healing compromised-> hip replacement necessary

  40. Hip Fracture Repair

  41. Hip Fracture Repair

  42. After Hip Repair/ Replacement • Take medications • Pain • Clot prevention • Rehabilitation • Programs available • Lifestyle adjustment • Long-term care and rehab • Assistive devices • Future fall prevention

  43. Preventing Falls • Preventing falls is key to older adults • Exercise regularly • Leg strength increases, balance improves • Review medications • Dizziness side effect • Regular eye exams • Maximizes vision during age-related changes • Lower hip fracture risk • Enhance calcium and vitamin D intake • Weight bearing exercises • Screening and treatment for osteoporosis

  44. References • http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/ahcd/agingtrends/01death.pdf • www.webmd.com • www.medicinenet.com • https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/health-topics • www.mayoclinic.com • www.stoke.org • http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus • http://nihseniorhealth.gov

More Related