Medication, solutions and specimens
Surgical Instruments
Hemostasis and Drains
Wound Closure
Scrubbing, gowning, and Sterile technique
100

Typically contain procedure name, list of all instruments needed for the procedure, patient position, positioning devices, medications and irrigation solutions, sutures, and dressings.

What are preference cards?

100

Can include: Scalpel, scissors, knifes, saws

What are cutting or dissecting instruments?

100
The arrest or stoppage of bleeding.

What is Hemostasis?

100

This is assimilated by tissues during the healing process. Digestion via enzyme activity.

What is an absorbable suture?
100
Personnel should wear surgical attire and cover facial and head hair in this space. A surgical mask should be worn if sterile supplies are opened or when in the presence of someone preforming a surgical hand srub. 

What is the restricted area?

200

Right patient, Right, medication, Right dose, Right route, Right time.

What are 5 rights of medication administration?

200
These can be traumatic or Atraumatic.

Ex:  Hemostats, maingots, kockers

What are clamping or occluding instruments?

200

These are used to prevent air accumulation or fluid collection in a surgical site.

What is a surgical drain?

200

A measurement of the strand's ability to resist breakage.

What is tensile strength?

200

Reduces microorganisms, removes, transient microorganisms and prevents contamination or the patient and sterile field.

What is surgical hand scrub?

300
Soft tissue, bone, blood, body fluid, or foreign bodies.

What are common specimens?

300

These hold back tissue to expose the operative site.

What are retractor instruments?


Bonus:  Name 2 we use in a cesarean section?

300
Decrease and control bleeding.

Minimize the need for blood replacement.

Optimize view of the surgical field.

Avoid damage to major organs.

Decrease risk of infection.

Shorten length of surgery and stay.

Decrease healthcare costs for patient and facilities.

What are the goal of Hemostasis?

300

Inflammation, proliferation and remodeling.

What are the 3 phases of wound healing?

300

Axilla, sleeve cuffs, neck and shoulder, back.

What are the unsterile parts of a gown?

400

A common dye and staining agent used in the OR. It is used to check for leaks that may have been caused during the proceedure.

What is Methylene Blue?

400

These can be used on delicate tissue or more sturdy tissue.

Ex: babcocks, allis, ring forceps, debakey.

What are grasping and holding instruments?

400

Mechanical, thermal and chemical

How to stop bleeding during surgery?

Bonus: give an example of each.

400

The inherent capability of the suture to keep or return to its original packaging shape after being stretched or tied.  

What is memory?

400

Sterile instrument table, drapes over the patient and furniture create this area

What is the sterile field?

500

The process of creating the most accurate list possible of all medications a patient is taking, including drug name, dosage, frequency and route.

What is medication reconciliation?

500

This is the most common joint type.  One arm is passed through a slot in the other arm and the ttwo halves are secured with a pin or rivet.

What is a box lock?

500
This is the principal enzyme of hemostatis.

What is Thrombin?

500

The wound is closed with suture or another product appropriate for a clean approximated incision. No tissue loss, minimal wound trauma, minimal drainage, well approximated(no dead space)

What is primary intention would healing?
500

A reflection of the individual nurse's honesty and moral integrity. Alone or with others and without the fear of embarrassment or criticism, the nurse will take immediate corrective action to remedy a break in sterile technique.

What is Surgical Conscience?

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