Mr Anthony Khoury, 67(M) presented at emergency department of the UTS hospital. Complain includes shortness of breath and chest pain. The patient was reported by the eldest daughter at 1000 hrs. On collection of the medical history, the patient was found to be diagnosed with type 2 diabetes 12 years ago. The patient was administered with oral medication. The diabetes complications of the patient include symptomatic neuropathy and Peripheral vascular diseases. The patient underwent coronary angioplasty and stents for myocardial infarction. He is also under regular cardiology care. Other medical history also involves hypertension, dyslipidaemia, and Angina also managed by oral medication. Recently the hypertension has exacerbated. The person is non-drinker but previously was involved in smoking. No allergies were reported in the patient. He was administered perindopril for hypertension and Atarvostatin for hyperlipidemia.
On admission Mr Khoury was observed with the following-
HR |
130 tachycardia |
BP |
Sitting: 152/92 standing: 130/64 |
Resp. |
28 non-productive cough; speaks in short phrases auscultation- coarse crackles Reports-orthopnoea fatigue with exercise |
O2 Sat. |
91% RA Elevated to 95% with O2 (6L/min) |
Temp. |
36.5oC |
LOC |
Alert orientated to person slight confusion with time and place (GCS 14/15) feels light headed after quick wake up |
Pupils |
Equal reactive to light |
Pain |
4/10 focused upper chest area (left) Decreased with O2 suppky |
Airway |
Patent |
Peripheries
|
oedema in both ankles |
BGL |
7 mmols/l |
Assessment data
Mr Khoury while arguing with his sons experienced sudden chest pain and breathlessness. His pain is exacerbating due to high level of anxiety and stress. His cardiac condition is weak with history of the Angina and Myocardial infarction. Chest pain together with shortness of breath is risk factor blockage in blood vessels and reduces supply of oxygen to the heart muscles, characteristics of the coronary artery disease. It is the condition of the inactive tissue perfusion and activity intolerance (Miller et al., 2015). There is a risk of coronary heart failure as the patient has high fluid accumulation in ankles, tachycardia, high anxiety, state of confusion and orthopnea. Orthopnea is the symptom of the left ventricular heart failure or and pulmonary edema (Gazewood & Turner, 2017). The patient was observed with fatigue. It is caused by decreased cardiac output and impaired skeletal muscle blood supply, which is causing fatigue. According to Sheldon et al. (2015) abnormal heart rhythms, supraventricular tachycardia increases the level of anxiety in patients with previous cardiac problems. This triggers the symptoms of the light-headedness, discomfort and shortness of breath.
The nursing goal for the patient is to reduce the chest pain scores and other contributing factors. The intervention to achieve this goal are-
The patient must be monitored for decrease in chest pain score, oxygen saturation and other vital signs to evaluate the desired outcome. If the observations are between the flags, immediate interventions will be taken and modify the previous nursing strategies. Monitoring can be discontinued if signs are in normal range. The patient must be evaluated for the decrease n anxiety and confusion. Effective feedback must be collected from the patent to rate the pain and satisfaction after intervention. The patient may demonstrate improved well being with the base line levels of Blood pressure, pulse, improved breathing. Pressure care shall be determined in nose and ear. The patient may be asked to verbalise his feelings of illness (Innovation, 2016).
Assessment data
Shortness of breath is the other major complain of Mr Khoury. His initial oxygen saturation level was 91% in RA. After administrating the oxygen, it elevated to the 95%. The patient could utter only few short sentences. The patient has oedema in both ankles. It is the sign of the venous congestion. Tachycardia leads to decreased cardiac output, increased sodium retention, increased osmotic pressure, increased ADH, increased water reabsopption and fluid overload oedma (Belen et al., 2015). Breathlessness is caused by the raised left ventricular filling pressure to maintain the decreased cardiac output. It increases pulmonary diffusion, and breathlessness. Extreme shortness of breath is the sign of the pulmonary edema also accompanied with the anxiety. The patient may be at risk of the pulmonary oedema owing to the symptoms of chest discomfort, irregular heart, headaches, non productive cough (Vital et al., 2013). Pulmonary oedema and heart failure are interlinked. Fluid accumulation in lungs impairs the gaseous exchange. The heart failure prevents the adequate removal of blood from the pulmonary circulation. In this condition the respiratory distress is to hypoxia (Platz et al., 2015).
The nursing goal for Mr Khoury is to achieve the oxygen saturation of 99% and relive of respiratory distress.
The patient may be monitored if the respiratory pattern is effective without fatigue. The oxygen saturation if achieved till 99%. Further, the input and output must be carefully regulated. If the input and the output is not appropriate then it must be followed by the clinical review. The patent may be monitored for mobility issue and risk of fall through fall risk assessment. If the patient has clear airway, without coarse crackles and deceased leg oedema, then the nursing goals are said to be achieved. The patient should be carefully monitored for any other complications (Powell et al., 2016)
References
AlGhatrif, M., & Lindsay, J. (2012). A brief review: history to understand fundamentals of electrocardiography. Journal of community hospital internal medicine perspectives, 2(1), 14383.
Authors/Task Force Members, McMurray, J. J., Adamopoulos, S., Anker, S. D., Auricchio, A., Böhm, M., … & Gomez-Sanchez, M. A. (2012). ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure 2012: The Task Force for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute and Chronic Heart Failure 2012 of the European Society of Cardiology. Developed in collaboration with the Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the ESC. European heart journal, 33(14), 1787-1847.
Azzolin, K., Mussi, C. M., Ruschel, K. B., de Souza, E. N., de Fátima Lucena, A., & Rabelo-Silva, E. R. (2013). Effectiveness of nursing interventions in heart failure patients in home care using NANDA-I, NIC, and NOC. Applied Nursing Research, 26(4), 239-244.
Belen, E., Tipi, F. F., Helvaci, A., & Bayyigit, A. (2015). Concurrent early-onset peripartum cardiomyopathy in a preeclampsia patient with acute pulmonary edema. Internal Medicine, 54(8), 925-927.
Collins, S. P., Pang, P. S., Fonarow, G. C., Yancy, C. W., Bonow, R. O., & Gheorghiade, M. (2013). Is hospital admission for heart failure really necessary?: the role of the emergency department and observation unit in preventing hospitalization and rehospitalization. Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 61(2), 121-126.
Cooper, G. (2013). Compression therapy in chronic oedema and lymphoedema. Nursing & Residential Care, 15(3), 134-139..
Gazewood, J. D., & Turner, P. L. (2017). Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction: Diagnosis and Management. American family physician, 96(9).
Granado, R.C. & amp; Mehta, R.L. (2016). Fluid overload in the ICU: evaluation and management', BMC Nephrology, vol. 17, no. 109, pp. 1-9
Gulanick, M., & Myers, J. L. (2013). Nursing Care Plans-E-Book: Nursing Diagnosis and Intervention. Elsevier Health Sciences.
Innovation, A.f.C. (2016), Cardiac Monitoring of Adult Cardiac Patients in NSW Public Hospitals, viewed 11th April 2018, <https://www1.health.nsw.gov.au/pds/ActivePDSDocuments/GL2016_019.pdf>.
Lenglet, H., Sztrymf, B., Leroy, C., Brun, P., Dreyfuss, D., & Ricard, J. D. (2012). Humidified high flow nasal oxygen during respiratory failure in the emergency department: feasibility and efficacy. Respiratory Care, 57(11), 1873-1878.
Martin, D. S., & Grocott, M. P. W. (2013). Oxygen therapy in critical illness: precise control of arterial oxygenation and permissive hypoxemia. Critical care medicine, 41(2), 423-432.
Miller, A. H., Carreras, M. T. C., Miller, S. A., Miller, H. E., & Page, V. D. (2015). Is there coronary artery disease in the cancer patient who manifests with chest pain, shortness of breath and/or tachycardia? A retrospective observational cohort. Supportive Care in Cancer, 23(2), 419-426.
Platz, E., Jhund, P. S., Campbell, R. T., & McMurray, J. J. (2015). Assessment and prevalence of pulmonary oedema in contemporary acute heart failure trials: a systematic review. European journal of heart failure, 17(9), 906-916.
Powell, J., Graham, D., O’Reilly, S. & Punton, G. (2016). Acute pulmonary oedema, Nursing Standard (2014+), vol. 30, no. 23, pp. 51-4.
Sheldon, R. S., Grubb, B. P., Olshansky, B., Shen, W. K., Calkins, H., Brignole, M., … & Sutton, R. (2015). 2015 Heart Rhythm Society expert consensus statement on the diagnosis and treatment of postural tachycardia syndrome, inappropriate sinus tachycardia, and vasovagal syncope. Heart rhythm, 12(6), e41-e63.
Vandse, R., Kothari, D. S., Tripathi, R. S., Lopez, L., Stawicki, S. P., & Papadimos, T. J. (2012). Negative pressure pulmonary edema with laryngeal mask airway use: Recognition, pathophysiology and treatment modalities. International journal of critical illness and injury science, 2(2), 98.
Vital, F. M., Ladeira, M. T., & Atallah, Á. N. (2013). Non?invasive positive pressure ventilation (CPAP or bilevel NPPV) for cardiogenic pulmonary oedema. The Cochrane Library.
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