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Chapter 46 Vital Signs

Chapter 46 Vital Signs. Vital Signs . *Vital signs (or cardinal symptoms) Temperature, pulse, respiration, and blood pressure Indicators of functions of the body that are necessary, and within normal limits, to maintain life Pulse oximetry is often included.

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Chapter 46 Vital Signs

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  1. Chapter 46Vital Signs

  2. Vital Signs • *Vital signs (or cardinal symptoms) • Temperature, pulse, respiration, and blood pressure • Indicators of functions of the body that are necessary, and within normal limits, to maintain life • Pulse oximetry is often included. • Pain is considered to be the fifth vital sign. • Documentation is essential to collecting information regarding the client’s status and well-being.

  3. Recording Vital Signs • Graphic record • Documents large amounts of information • Vital signs must be recorded accurately and promptly to provide continuous and current documentation. • Helps providers diagnose and respond to the client’s changing condition • Paper record • Electronic graphic record • Frequent vital signs sheet

  4. Regulation of Body Temperature • Body temperature • Measure of core temperature on the Celsius (centigrade—C) or the Fahrenheit (F) scale. • Hypothalamus controls body temperature by controlling blood temperature. • Normal body temperature • Elevated body temperature: Fever or pyrexia

  5. Range of Temperatures** • Oral • 35.5-37.5C or 95.9-99.5F • Rectal • 36.6-38C or 97.9-100.4F • Axillary • 34.7-37.3C or 94.5-99.1F • Tympanic • Temporal

  6. Fever • Intermittent fever • Alternates between a fever and a normal or subnormal reading • remittent fever • Temp that rises several degrees above normal and return to normal or near normal • constant fever

  7. Fever • crisis • Sudden drop form fever to normal • lysis • Elevated temp that gradually returns to normal • relapsing fever • Fever that returns to normal for at least a day and then occurs again

  8. Regulation of Body Temperature (cont’d) • Lowered body temperature or hypothermia • A temperature significantly below normal • Clinical hypothermia • Used to perform some surgical procedures • Accidental hypothermia • Life threatening and requires immediate treatment

  9. Equipment for Measuring Temperature • Electronic or automatic thermometer • Probes are encased in a new cover for each client. • Discarded according to agency protocol • Disposable single-use thermometer • Made of paper, often used in isolation units*

  10. Measuring Body Temperature • Several locations are used to measure body temperature. • Oral (O)—mouth • Rectal (R)—anus • Axillary (Ax)—armpit • Tympanic, aural, or otic • (TM—tympanic membrane)—ear canal • Temporal artery (TA)—forehead

  11. Measuring Body Temperature (cont’d) • Oral Temperature: Measures the temperature within the lingual arteries under the tongue (sublingual) • More accurate than axillary and less accurate than rectal measurement • Not used for • Infants and children, clients with active seizure disorder, clients who had oral surgery • Wait 15 minutes before measuring temperature. • If client has had a hot or cold drink or has been smoking

  12. Measuring Body Temperature (cont’d) • Rectal temperature • Highly accurate • Contraindicated after rectal surgery (and often after vaginal surgery) and in conditions such as diarrhea, colitis, or cancer of the rectum • Axillary temperature • Least accurate measurement • Used to take temperature of newborns

  13. Measuring Body Temperature (cont’d) • Tympanic temperature • Tympanic thermometer is placed snugly into the client’s outer ear canal. • Ideal site for measuring the body’s core temperature • Temporal artery temperature • Quickest, noninvasive* • Temporal artery temperature scanner • Calculates core body temperature or peak body temperature

  14. Glass Thermometer • Glass mercury-containing thermometers are illegal in the United States. • Patient education • Properly dispose of any mercury-containing items. • Extended-care facility • May use thermometers containing alcohol

  15. The Pulse • Pulse • Every heartbeat produces a wave of blood that causes pulsations through the arteries. • Temporal pulse • Mandibular pulse • Carotid artery pulse • Femoral pulse • Radial pulse

  16. Regulation of Pulse • Pulse Rate: The normal adult pulse rate is 60 to 80 beats per minute (bpm). Women have a slightly higher average rate than men* Newborns range from 120-140bpm*, toddlers range 80-140* • Tachycardia • Bradycardia • Pulse volume • Pulse rhythm • Apical-radial pulse

  17. Methods and Equipment • Palpation • To assess the radial, temporal, mandibular, carotid, and femoral pulses • Auscultation and counting the apical pulse will usually give the most accurate assessment of pulse rate. For this assessment, use a stethoscope. • An ultrasonic vascular Doppler device is sometimes used to detect peripheral pulses.

  18. Measuring the Pulse • Radial pulse • Apical pulse (AP) • More accurate than radial, always used for children younger than 2 years of age** • Apical-radial pulse (A-R) • It is impossible for the apical pulse to be lower than the radial. • If radial is less than apical pulse, a pulse deficit occurs! • Pedal pulse • Popliteal pulse • Carotid pulse • DO NOT reach across the persons neck to obtain!!

  19. Respiratory rates at various ages** • Newborn • 30-80 • Early childhood • 20-40 • Late childhood • 15-25 • Adults • 12-18 • 16-20

  20. Regulation of Respiration • Respiratory control • Apnea • Rate and depth • Eupnea, tachypnea, bradypnea • Kussmaul’s respirations • Labored breathing, deep and gasping* • Respiration sounds • Snoring • Stertorous breathing • Obstruction near the glottis causes a hissing, crowing sound**

  21. Difficult Breathing • Dyspnea: Difficult or painful breathing • Orthopnea: Can breathe only when in an upright position • Asthma: Spasms and edema of the bronchi cause breathing difficultly. • Characteristic signs of breathing difficulty • Heaving of the chest and abdomen, a distressed expression, and cyanosis in the skin • Cheyne-Stokes respirations • Regular pattern with alternating deep and shallow breaths with apnea*

  22. Regulation of Blood Pressure • Blood pressure is determined by cardiac output and peripheral resistance. • Cardiac output: • Combination of heart rate and stroke volume • Measured over 1 minute • Systolic blood pressure (SBP) • Diastolic blood pressure (DBP) • AHA says normal BP is 115/75* • Pulse pressure • Difference of systolic pressure minus diastolic pressure

  23. Blood Pressure: Methods and Equipment • Measure in both arms • Difference of 5-10 points may exists, but if more than 10 points exist, this indicates and arterial occlusion in the arm with the lower pressure* • Sphygmomanometer • Aneroid manometer • Electronic blood pressure apparatus • Palpation • Doppler ultrasound* • Used when sounds are difficult to hear or indistinct • Amplifies sound

  24. Measuring Blood Pressure • Korotkoff’s sounds • Sounds heard in the stethoscope when taking BP* • Physical exertion or emotional stress will affect BP. • Orthostatic blood pressure measurement • Older clients • Those who are taking certain medications • Orthostatic or postural hypotension

  25. Pulse Oximetry • Pulse oximetry • Component of baseline vital signs • Noninvasive procedure • Uses a photoelectric impulse to measure the amount of light transmitted or reflected by deoxygenated versus oxygenated hemoglobin • Pulse oximeter or transducer

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