Download Word version of this scenario

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

History of invasive and interventional cardiology wikipedia , lookup

Coronary artery disease wikipedia , lookup

Dextro-Transposition of the great arteries wikipedia , lookup

Management of acute coronary syndrome wikipedia , lookup

Quantium Medical Cardiac Output wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Last updated on 10 Sep 2015 at 2:36 PM (Abdo22)
Postoperative complications
A 75 year old Chinese woman had an anterior resection (large bowel operation) 4
days ago. She develops fever, abdominal pain and has not opened her bowels since
surgery. She has an intravenous cannula in her forearm and one in her foot. She also
has an indwelling urinary catheter. Her heart rate is 130 beats per minute, her blood
pressure has fallen to 90/50 mmHg, and her temperature is 38.3°C. She is breathing
rapidly. You are the on call junior doctor and are asked to review her.
Applied Science for Medicine
Anatomy of abdomen, thorax and pelvis
Physiological changes following surgery, including consequences of fasting
The spectrum of healthcare-associated infections
Pathogenesis of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), atelectasis, deep
vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism
Microbiology of peritonitis and surgical site infection; microorganisms associated
with venous lines and urinary catheters
Pharmacology of beta-lactam antimicrobials, metronidazole, aminoglycosides,
paracetamol and opioids
Principles of repeated drug dosing, pharmacokinetic variability in the response to
drugs, monitoring drug concentrations, rational prescribing (calculation of drug
dosage)
Clinical and Communication Skills
History from a patient with postoperative complications
Recognise and assess a critically unwell surgical patient
Describe the range of potential postoperative complications
Classify types and severity of shock
Perform arterial blood gas, venepuncture, central line and peripheral blood cultures,
urinary catheter placement, peripheral intravenous cannulation, ECG, placement of
nasogastric tube
Recognise infectious and non-infectious complications of medical devices
Interpret chest X-ray, ECG, abdominal X-ray, full blood count, renal function tests,
liver function tests, coagulation screen, C-reactive protein
Indications for CT abdomen/pelvis, CT pulmonary angiogram, ventilation/perfusion
(V/Q) scan
Management, in the postoperative setting, of fluid resuscitation, early sepsis,
thromboembolic disease, acute coronary syndrome, wound infection, ileus, cardiac
arrhythmias, acute alcohol withdrawal
Antimicrobial stewardship: rational empirical antibiotic choices including
perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis
Prescribing intravenous fluids
Perioperative care of diabetic patients
Management of septic shock, complications following abdominal surgery and
perioperative nutrition
Indications for removal of iatrogenic devices
Perioperative nutritional and metabolic needs of the patient
Post-operative analgesia, drug and administration options
Personal and Professional Skills
Empathise about a major operation with complications involving unpleasant
symptoms and a longer hospital stay
Ethics regarding consent and advance directives
Awareness of cultural issues when discussing a patient's health status
Self-care: coping with stressful situations
Understand your limitations and when to call for help
Hauora MÄ•ori
Engage appropriately with whĕnau, as well as patient
Involve cultural/spiritual support team when appropriate
Ability to cater for differential health literacy needs of MÄ•ori patients and
whĕnau
Consideration of patient and whĕnau needs when delivering life-changing news
Population Health
Burden of post-operative complications to society
Importance of hospital 'morbidity and mortality' meeting and clinical governance
Epidemiology in New Zealand of thromboembolic disease occurring in hospitalised
patients
Conditions to be considered relating to this scenario
peritonitis, anastomotic leak, healthcare-associated
Common
infection (including surgical site infection, pneumonia,
peripheral and central intravenous cannula infection,
urinary tract infection), other causes of postoperative
fever (including atelectasis, pulmonary embolus, drug
reaction), electrolyte imbalance, postoperative ileus,
acute coronary syndrome (STEMI, NSTEMI and
unstable angina), cardiac arrhythmias, dehydration,
delirium tremens
pseudo-obstruction, diabetic ketoacidosis, ischaemic
Less common but
bowel, perforation, wound dehiscence, septic shock
'important not to miss'