Nasogastric
Tubes
Enteral Tubes
Small Bowel Obstruction
Nursing Interventions
Miscellaneous
100

Tube, lubricant, paper towel, large syringe, pH testing strips, dressing, glass of water if allowed

What is "Equipment" for insertion of a nasogastric tube

100

Cannot safety chew or swallow, client has an obstruction in the GI tract

Why an "Enteral Tube is Inserted'

100

Scar tissue from surgery, hernias, 

What are "Possible Causes of a Bowel Obstruction"

100

Standardized scale (e.g., PQRST method)

What is a "Pain Assessment"

100

Reporting worsening pain, vomiting, or changes in bowel habits, NPO status, NG tube, and IV therapy

What is "Nursing Education"

200

Misplacement into the airway, nasal trauma, aspiration, infection or coiling into the oral cavity

What are "Possible Complications" of inserting a nasogastric tube

200

Nasogastric tube, Nasoduodenal tube, Naso-jejunal tube, Gastrostomy or Jejunostomy tubes 

What are "Types of Enteral tubes"

200

Severe pain, bloating, vomiting

What are "Signs and Symptoms" of a Bowel Obstruction 

200

Bowel sounds, distension, tenderness, and signs of peritonitis such as rebound tenderness or rigidity

What is an "Abdominal Assessment"

200

Reassurance, address anxiety, involve family members in care planning to reduce stress and improve compliance

What is "Providing Emotional Support"

300

Recent nasal surgery, severe midface trauma, coagulation abnormality, esophageal varices

What are "Contraindications" of nasogastric insertion

300

pH testing, X-ray or endoscopy, electromagnetic systems like CORTRAK 2

What are "Methods to Determine Verification of Enteral Tube Placement"

300

WBC >10,000/mm³, elevated lactate, hypokalemia, hyponatremia, and hypochloremia

What are some of the possible "Laboratory Results" with a Bowel Obstruction

300

Tachycardia, hypotension, or fever, which may indicate complications like sepsis or hypovolemia

What are "Monitoring Vital Signs"

300

History, physical examination, and laboratory tests to assess hydration, electrolytes, and acid-base status

What is an "Initial Assessment"

400

From the nostril through the nasal cavity, pharynx, esophagus, and into the stomach or upper small intestine

What is the "Pathway" of the nasogastric tube

400

Consent, formulation suitability, individual administration 

What is "Required for Medication Administration"

400

Hospitalization, dietary changes, possible surgery 

What are possible "Treatments" for a Bowel Obstruction

400

Analgesics, antiemetics, bowel decompression

What is "Symptom Management"

400

The preferred imaging modality, offering >90% accuracy in detecting SBO, identifying the transition point, grading obstruction severity, and detecting complications such as ischemia or perforation

What is a "Computed tomography (CT) with intravenous contrast"

500

Verify NG tube placement, wear gloves, face and eye protection, monitor for complications, patient comfort, document care

What are "Nursing Considerations"

500

Flushing, blockage prevention, monitoring

What are "Feeding and Tube Management"

500

Physical exam, X-ray, CT scan, ultrasound, barium enema

What "providers use to Diagnoses a Bowel Obstruction"

500

Preoperative teaching, consent verification, and ensuring IV access

What is "Preparation for Surgical Intervention"

500
  • Bowel rest 
  • Nasogastric decompression
  • Fluid and electrolyte correction
  • Serial clinical and imaging monitoring

What is "Nonoperative Management" for a Bowel Obstruction

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