المنياوى المدير العام
عدد المساهمات : 274 نقاط : 39720 السٌّمعَة : 30000 تاريخ التسجيل : 05/03/2011 العمر : 37
| موضوع: T-Tube Care الخميس مارس 10, 2011 10:00 am | |
| T-Tube Care Equipment
- Graduated collection container
- Small plastic bag
- Sterile gloves and clean gloves
- Clamp
- Sterile 4”x4” gauze pads
- Transparent dressings
- Rubber band
- Normal saline solution
- Sterile cleaning solution
- Two sterile basins
- Providone-iodine pads
- Sterile precut drain dressings
- Hyperallergenic paper tape
- Skin protectant
- Montgomery strips
Preparation of equipment
- Assemble the equipment at the bedside
- Open all sterile equipment. Place one sterile 4”x4” gauze pad in each sterile basin
- Using sterile technique, pour 50ml of cleaning solution into one basin and 50 ml of normal saline solution into the other basin.
- Tape a small plastic bag on the table to use for refuse
Procedure
- Verify the patient’s identity using two patient identifiers, such as the patient’s name and identification number.
- Provide privacy and reinforce the explanation of the procedure to the patient
- Wash hands
Emptying drainage
- Put on glean gloves
- Place the graduated collection container under the outlet valve of the drainage bag. Without contaminating the clamp, valve, or outlet valve, empty the bag’s *******s completely into the container and reseal the outlet valve.
- Carefully measure and record the character, color, and amount of drainage.
- Discard gloves
Clamping the T-tube
- As ordered, occlude the tube lightly with a clamp or wrap a rubber band around the end. Clamping the tube 1 hour before and after meals diverts the bile back to the duodenum to aid digestion.
- Monitor the patient’s response to clamping.
- To ensure the comfort and safety, check the bile drainage amounts regularly.
Nursing Interventions
- The T-tube usually drains 300 to 500 ml of thin, blood tinged bile in the first 24 hours after surgery.
- To prevent excessive bile loss over 500ml in the first 24 hours or backflow contamination. Bile will flow into the bag only when biliary pressure increases.
- Provide meticulous skin care and frequent dressing changes since bile is irritating to the skin.
- Monitor for bile leakage, which may indicate obstruction.
- Monitor tube patency and the condition of the site hourly for the first 8 hours.
- Protect the skin edges and avoid excessive taping.
- Monitor all urine and stools for color changes.
- Reinforce with the patient that loose bowel occur commonly the first few weeks after surgery.
- Remind the patient about signs and symptoms of T-tube and biliary obstruction and to report them to physicians.
- Teach the patient how to care for the tube at home.
- Reinforce with the patient that the bile stains clothing and is irritating to the skin.
Complications
- Obstructed bile flow, skin excoriation or breakdown, tube dislodgement, drainage reflux, and infection
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