Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

23
Chapter 24 Vital Signs

description

Vital Signs Temperature Pulse Respiration Blood pressure

Transcript of Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Page 1: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Chapter 24Vital Signs

Page 2: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Vital Signs• Temperature• Pulse• Respiration• Blood pressure

Page 3: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

When to Assess Vital Signs• Upon admission to any healthcare agency• Based on agency institutional policy and procedures• Any time there is a change in the patient’s condition• Before and after surgical or invasive diagnostic

procedures• Before and after activity that may increase risk• Before administering medications that affect

cardiovascular or respiratory functioning

Page 4: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Maintenance of Body Temperature• Thermoregulatory center in the hypothalamus regulates

temperature• Center receives messages from cold and warm thermal

receptors in the body• Center initiates responses to produce or conserve body

heat or increase heat loss

Page 5: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Heat Production• Primary source is metabolism• Hormones, muscle movements, and exercise increase

metabolism• Epinephrine and norepinephrine are released and alter

metabolism• Energy production decreases and heat production

increases

Page 6: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Sources of Heat Loss• Skin (primary source)• Evaporation of sweat• Warming and humidifying inspired air • Eliminating urine and feces

Page 7: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Transfer of Body Heat to External Environment• Radiation• Convection ( الحمل (بواسطة• Evaporation• Conduction

Page 8: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Pulse Physiology• Regulated by the autonomic nervous system through

cardiac sinoatrial node• Parasympathetic stimulation — decrease heart rate• Sympathetic stimulation — increases heart rate• Pulse rate = number of contractions over a peripheral

artery in 1 minute

Page 9: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Respirations• Pulmonary ventilation — movement of air in and out of

lungs– Inhalation: breathing in– Exhalation: breathing out

Page 10: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Rate and Depth of Breathing • Changes in response to body demands• Controlled by respiratory centers in the medulla and pons• Activated by impulses from chemoreceptors • Increase in carbon dioxide is the most powerful

respiratory stimulant

Page 11: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Physiology of Blood Pressure• Force of the blood against arterial walls• Controlled by a variety of mechanism to maintain

adequate tissue perfusion• Pressure rises as ventricle contracts and falls as heart

relaxes– Highest pressure is systolic– Lowest pressure is diastolic

Page 12: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Factors Affecting Body Temperature• Circadian rhythms• Age and gender• Environmental temperatures

Page 13: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Pulse Variations• Increased or decreased pulse rate• Pulse amplitude and quality• Regular or irregular pulse rhythm

Page 14: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Factors Affecting Respirations• Exercise • Respiratory and cardiovascular disease • Alterations in fluid, electrolyte, and acid balances• Medications• Trauma• Infection• Pain• Anxiety

Page 15: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Factors Affecting Blood Pressure• Age, gender, race• Circadian rhythm• Food intake• Exercise• Weight• Emotional state• Body position• Drugs/medications

Page 16: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Equipment for Assessing Temperature• Electronic and digital thermometer• Tympanic membrane thermometer• Glass thermometer• Disposable single-use thermometer• Temporal artery thermometer• Automated monitoring devices

Page 17: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Equipment for Assessing Blood Pressure• Stethoscope and sphygmomanometer• Doppler ultrasound• Electronic or automated devices

Page 18: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Sites for Assessing Temperature• Tympanic membrane• Oral• Rectal• Axillary

Page 19: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Sites for Assessing Pulse• Palpating peripheral arteries• Auscultating apical pulse with stethoscope• Assessing apical-radial pulse

Page 20: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Assessing Respirations• Inspection• Listening with stethoscope• Monitoring arterial blood gas results• Using a pulse oximeter

Page 21: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Assessing Blood Pressure• Listening for Korotkoff sounds with stethoscope

– First sound is systolic pressure– Change or cessation of sounds occurs - diastolic

pressure• The brachial artery and popliteal artery are commonly

used

Page 22: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Normal Temperatures for Healthy Adults• Oral – 37.0ºC, 98.6ºF• Rectal – 37.5ºC, 99.5ºF• Axillary – 36.5ºC, 97.6ºF• Tympanic – 37.5ºC, 99.5ºF• Forehead – 34.4ºC, 94.0ºF

Page 23: Chapter 24 Vital Signs.

Normal ranges for Vital Signs for Healthy Adults• Oral temperature — 37.0ºC, 98.6ºF• Pulse rate — 60 to 100 (80 average)• Respirations — 12 to 20 breaths/minute• Blood pressure — 130/85